Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Brianna Wu - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businesswoman Brianna Wu.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
The cost of speaking out is so high for women, I understand why most decide not to.
Gamergate taught me that I was stronger than I knew that I was.
The Internet has done so much for so many. It allows women and minorities to have access to education, training, and information that sometimes isn't available to them for whatever reason.
I've rarely talked about Obama's share of the blame for the rise of the alt-right and Gamergate. — © Brianna Wu
I've rarely talked about Obama's share of the blame for the rise of the alt-right and Gamergate.
Unfortunately, I have the equivalent of 7 PhDs in harassment on Twitter. As one of the primary targets of Gamergate, I've had hundreds and hundreds of threats to my life on Twitter's platform.
Something that's hard for me, I remember being a child in the '80s and looking at this field. It was a field I wanted very much to go into, but I didn't see people who looked like me working in video games. You can't really be it if you can't see it.
I love people that kind of have those life experiences that take them different places.
The first game I remember being ridiculously passionate about was Super Mario Bros. 2. It was the first game where you could play as Princess Peach. It wasn't just a game where the boys had their adventure. Peach was in the game and she was so powerful there.
My big lesson from Gamergate is asking the men in charge to do the right thing does not work. So we need women, we need people of color in positions of power not just in the game industry but at social media and tech companies and in Congress.
I think what a lot of women in the game industry saw with Gamergate is they saw if they came forward, help was not going to come.
There's a common personality type to software developers - one I certainly fall into. We're more comfortable staring at a screen than staring into someone's eyes. Engineers can be brilliant in the workplace, and something less-than-brilliant everywhere else.
Gamergate is a criminal operation to harass women.
I am a programmer. If I write code, I don't evaluate the results by what I hope the code will be. I evaluate it by what happens when I compile it. I evaluate it by results.
There are some men that are very threatened by the fact that women play games nowadays. — © Brianna Wu
There are some men that are very threatened by the fact that women play games nowadays.
A lot of people don't know this about me but actually I started in politics.
Let's not glamorize abuse.
I'm a reasonably accomplished journalist. I've worked as an investigative journalist, I've done crime beat stuff.
The real question is whether or not the communities that rule the Internet can make their spaces safer for users, especially women and minorities.
The tech industry has a strong bias towards technical solutions to social problems.
With my company, Giant Spacekat, I was very angry about the lack of games that portrayed women positively in the video game industry, so I launched my own studio, gave a lot of very talented women jobs, and we made some of the most awesome, empowering games in the business.
There's a real sense - that we have to get past on the left - that every person who voted for Trump is evil.
To stand up to GamerGate, that's my choice. I can't make that choice for the women I work with.
I don't want to be a hardware engineer. That seems like a terrible job.
I grew up listening to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, and it took me getting out into the real world and understanding what I faced as a woman in my career to really open up my eyes.
I work in the tech industry and my husband works in biotech. He's head of IP for a company listed on the NASDAQ. And we have a lot of discussions in tech and biotech about the role of unionization in our industries.
I still quite enjoy watching Fox News because I think it makes me think through my arguments and make sure I'm on the right side.
Entrepreneurship is in my nature.
I don't regret standing up to Gamergate at all.
The truth is, the game industry is a really incredibly difficult place for women to work. — © Brianna Wu
The truth is, the game industry is a really incredibly difficult place for women to work.
My mom bought a computer in the '80s to do accounting, and she was so smart at computers that we spent all our time with them. My childhood was sitting on the floor of her office and figuring out how to program with my mom.
The public will forgive you almost anything if you're honest about it.
In some ways, the real damage of Gamergate is pushing the public's idea of sexism so far to the extreme, that changes in the professional sphere seem unimportant.
I was adopted into an extremely right-wing religious family.
It is not a secret that I am a feminist and I have more liberal views and a lot of these GamerGaters have more right-wing views.
I look at my own party, and I see that we've taken this technocratic, academic, elitist liberal class philosophy as far as it can go, and we got our butts kicked - and I don't know what else to do other than get involved myself.
GamerGate has had an almost indescribable toll on my family.
In politics, I am facing a lot of structural sexism.
If you run a website where people can congregate, you have a moral responsibility to make sure that community is not harassed.
My dad is in Mississippi. He exited the Navy and made a ton of money as an entrepreneur. — © Brianna Wu
My dad is in Mississippi. He exited the Navy and made a ton of money as an entrepreneur.
What's the fundamental problem that VR solves better than anything? To me it's straightforward. It's story. VR tells stories better than any medium.
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