Skip to main content

Black Girls Code founder challenges tech CEOs to step up

 

As protests over police brutality and racism roil the country, Black Girls Code founder Kimberly Bryant called for tech CEOs to do more in creating change that will address the systemic inequities embedded in the industry.

“We have to challenge these CEOs to step up to the plate, examine what they’ve done to date to create real change, not just in their companies but in the world,” Bryant told Digital Trends Live. “There is so much potential to create change with the resources that they have, and if we can get someone to go to the moon in SpaceX, I think we can solve the diversity issue, I really do.”

Black Girls Code is a nonprofit organization that is focused on providing technology education to young women of color, with the mission of addressing the lack of diversity in the industry and making sure that girls from underrepresented communities “have a seat at the table,” Bryant said.

Bryant said that unrest happening in the U.S. is not surprising for those who have been encouraging diversity and inclusion in the tech industry for years. She believes that people are responding to the systemic inequities embedded in organizations, including those in the tech world.

“I think that places even more of a spotlight on an industry such as technology … where there is such a lack of diversity in terms of who’s getting funded, who’s in the pipeline, who is creating the technology,”

Bryant, however, wants tech CEOs not just to make a statement, but to do something truly actionable to take the first step in creating systemic change — even if it may hurt them in the short term.

“Really examine: What have they done to create the unrest we see around us?” she said.

In the Digital Trends Live interview, Bryant urged young women who are aspiring to work in the tech industry to feed their passion and invest in learning, as her organization seeks to help create pathways for them. Bryant also requested parents to support the goals of their children, giving herself as an example as she explored opportunities for her daughter when she started showing interest in game development.

Starting April, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Black Girls Code went virtual with online workshops and career panels that reach out to 1,000 students per week. Bryant called for software developers who may want to help create these workshops, and for donors who may be generous enough to provide resources to fund the shift to virtual platforms and the organization’s rapid growth.

Bryant also recommended young women to tap into organizations such as Black Girls Code in order to find communities made up of individuals with similar backgrounds, which will help them not only survive but also thrive in the industry.

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
Google just gave vision to AI, but it’s still not available for everyone
Gemini Live App on the Galaxy S25 Ultra broadcast to a TV showing the Gemini app with the camera feature open

Google has just officially announced the roll out of a powerful Gemini AI feature that means the intelligence can now see.

This started in March as Google began to show off Gemini Live, but it's now become more widely available.

Read more
This modular Pebble and Apple Watch underdog just smashed funding goals
UNA Watch

Both the Pebble Watch and Apple Watch are due some fierce competition as a new modular brand, UNA, is gaining some serous backing and excitement.

The UNA Watch is the creation of a Scottish company that wants to give everyone modular control of smartwatch upgrades and repairs.

Read more
Tesla, Warner Bros. dodge some claims in ‘Blade Runner 2049’ lawsuit, copyright battle continues
Tesla Cybercab at night

Tesla and Warner Bros. scored a partial legal victory as a federal judge dismissed several claims in a lawsuit filed by Alcon Entertainment, a production company behind the 2017 sci-fi movie Blade Runner 2049, Reuters reports.
The lawsuit accused the two companies of using imagery from the film to promote Tesla’s autonomous Cybercab vehicle at an event hosted by Tesla CEO Elon Musk at Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) Studios in Hollywood in October of last year.
U.S. District Judge George Wu indicated he was inclined to dismiss Alcon’s allegations that Tesla and Warner Bros. violated trademark law, according to Reuters. Specifically, the judge said Musk only referenced the original Blade Runner movie at the event, and noted that Tesla and Alcon are not competitors.
"Tesla and Musk are looking to sell cars," Reuters quoted Wu as saying. "Plaintiff is plainly not in that line of business."
Wu also dismissed most of Alcon's claims against Warner Bros., the distributor of the Blade Runner franchise.
However, the judge allowed Alcon to continue its copyright infringement claims against Tesla for its alleged use of AI-generated images mimicking scenes from Blade Runner 2049 without permission.
Alcan says that just hours before the Cybercab event, it had turned down a request from Tesla and WBD to use “an icononic still image” from the movie.
In the lawsuit, Alcon explained its decision by saying that “any prudent brand considering any Tesla partnership has to take Musk’s massively amplified, highly politicized, capricious and arbitrary behavior, which sometimes veers into hate speech, into account.”
Alcon further said it did not want Blade Runner 2049 “to be affiliated with Musk, Tesla, or any Musk company, for all of these reasons.”
But according to Alcon, Tesla went ahead with feeding images from Blade Runner 2049 into an AI image generator to yield a still image that appeared on screen for 10 seconds during the Cybercab event. With the image featured in the background, Musk directly referenced Blade Runner.
Alcon also said that Musk’s reference to Blade Runner 2049 was not a coincidence as the movie features a “strikingly designed, artificially intelligent, fully autonomous car.”

Read more