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41 results for “criadoperez”
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"Der Großteil der Menschheitsgeschichte ist eine einzige Datenlücke."
#firstwords #InvisibleWomen #UnsichtbareFrauen #GenderDataGap #CriadoPerez
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Reading #InvisibleWomen #CriadoPerez. I'm only on the introduction and steam is coming out of my ears.
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"Der Großteil der Menschheitsgeschichte ist eine einzige Datenlücke."
#firstwords #InvisibleWomen #UnsichtbareFrauen #GenderDataGap #CriadoPerez
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"Der Großteil der Menschheitsgeschichte ist eine einzige Datenlücke."
#firstwords #InvisibleWomen #UnsichtbareFrauen #GenderDataGap #CriadoPerez
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"Der Großteil der Menschheitsgeschichte ist eine einzige Datenlücke."
#firstwords #InvisibleWomen #UnsichtbareFrauen #GenderDataGap #CriadoPerez
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"Der Großteil der Menschheitsgeschichte ist eine einzige Datenlücke."
#firstwords #InvisibleWomen #UnsichtbareFrauen #GenderDataGap #CriadoPerez
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Eat, sleep, read, repeat! 🔁
(...I just came across an interesting passage, by the way, quoting #SteveLevy's » #Hackers – Heroes of the Computer Revolution«. Some sentences in there seem not to have aged very well...)
#viladoconde #feminism #CriadoPerez #InbisibleWomen #GenderDataGap
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Eat, sleep, read, repeat! 🔁
(...I just came across an interesting passage, by the way, quoting #SteveLevy's » #Hackers – Heroes of the Computer Revolution«. Some sentences in there seem not to have aged very well...)
#viladoconde #feminism #CriadoPerez #InbisibleWomen #GenderDataGap
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Eat, sleep, read, repeat! 🔁
(...I just came across an interesting passage, by the way, quoting #SteveLevy's » #Hackers – Heroes of the Computer Revolution«. Some sentences in there seem not to have aged very well...)
#viladoconde #feminism #CriadoPerez #InbisibleWomen #GenderDataGap
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Eat, sleep, read, repeat! 🔁
(...I just came across an interesting passage, by the way, quoting #SteveLevy's » #Hackers – Heroes of the Computer Revolution«. Some sentences in there seem not to have aged very well...)
#viladoconde #feminism #CriadoPerez #InbisibleWomen #GenderDataGap
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Eat, sleep, read, repeat! 🔁
(...I just came across an interesting passage, by the way, quoting #SteveLevy's » #Hackers – Heroes of the Computer Revolution«. Some sentences in there seem not to have aged very well...)
#viladoconde #feminism #CriadoPerez #InbisibleWomen #GenderDataGap
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CW: rape, abuse, medical misogyny
The story of Gisele Pelicot has been haunting me ever since I heard about it.
For those who haven’t heard - Gisele was drugged by her husband and raped by over 80 men. He would invite them to come assault her while she was unconscious - and she only found out when police investigated him in connection with filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket.
I just found out that Gisele had gone to multiple doctors while the abuse was ongoing. She had concerns about blackouts, memory loss and vaginal bruising. She was dismissed every time. Told it was in her head or part of getting older.
This is why I talk about misogyny in medicine. About the importance of believing women and recognizing they’re the experts in their bodies. She KNEW something was wrong.
She couldn’t possibly know WHAT - because she was being drugged by a man she loved and trusted. But her body knew. So she went to get help from the doctors she trusted.
Imagine if they had really listened. If they had done a physical exam and found STIs? If they had done labs and found traces of drugs. It’s possible the doctors could have found evidence of abuse and stopped her from going home to a man who was causing her tremendous harm. At the very least there were enough warning signs to involve social work and investigate. The fact that the abuse went on for a decade and NO medical professional helped her? Its horrific.
They compounded her trauma by making her think it was all in her head (and at one point she was worried she was developing Alzheimer’s).
This is all too much. I feel overwhelmed with anger, sadness and grief for Gisele. For myself. For all women who’ve been victims of assault. For everyone who’s been dismissed and ignored by doctors they trusted to help them.
She is incredibly brave allowing her story and trial to be public - and I ask people not to look away. Say her name. Share her story. Let men know they WILL be held accountable. That we won’t suffer in shame and silence anymore.
Finally - to all the healthcare workers out there - please listen to your patients. Don’t dismiss someone without making sure you aren’t missing something. We can’t diagnose ourselves… we’re counting on you.
I found this article earlier which sums up a lot of what I’m feeling and can’t quite say yet: https://open.substack.com/pub/carolinecriadoperez/p/invisible-women-not-all-menbut-how?r=19dk2e&utm_medium=ios
#rape #abuse #consent #misogyny #notallmen #misogynyinmedicine #giselepelicot #bodilyautonomy #patriarchy #neglect #womensrights #womenshealth #believewomen
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CW: rape, abuse, medical misogyny
The story of Gisele Pelicot has been haunting me ever since I heard about it.
For those who haven’t heard - Gisele was drugged by her husband and raped by over 80 men. He would invite them to come assault her while she was unconscious - and she only found out when police investigated him in connection with filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket.
I just found out that Gisele had gone to multiple doctors while the abuse was ongoing. She had concerns about blackouts, memory loss and vaginal bruising. She was dismissed every time. Told it was in her head or part of getting older.
This is why I talk about misogyny in medicine. About the importance of believing women and recognizing they’re the experts in their bodies. She KNEW something was wrong.
She couldn’t possibly know WHAT - because she was being drugged by a man she loved and trusted. But her body knew. So she went to get help from the doctors she trusted.
Imagine if they had really listened. If they had done a physical exam and found STIs? If they had done labs and found traces of drugs. It’s possible the doctors could have found evidence of abuse and stopped her from going home to a man who was causing her tremendous harm. At the very least there were enough warning signs to involve social work and investigate. The fact that the abuse went on for a decade and NO medical professional helped her? Its horrific.
They compounded her trauma by making her think it was all in her head (and at one point she was worried she was developing Alzheimer’s).
This is all too much. I feel overwhelmed with anger, sadness and grief for Gisele. For myself. For all women who’ve been victims of assault. For everyone who’s been dismissed and ignored by doctors they trusted to help them.
She is incredibly brave allowing her story and trial to be public - and I ask people not to look away. Say her name. Share her story. Let men know they WILL be held accountable. That we won’t suffer in shame and silence anymore.
Finally - to all the healthcare workers out there - please listen to your patients. Don’t dismiss someone without making sure you aren’t missing something. We can’t diagnose ourselves… we’re counting on you.
I found this article earlier which sums up a lot of what I’m feeling and can’t quite say yet: https://open.substack.com/pub/carolinecriadoperez/p/invisible-women-not-all-menbut-how?r=19dk2e&utm_medium=ios
#rape #abuse #consent #misogyny #notallmen #misogynyinmedicine #giselepelicot #bodilyautonomy #patriarchy #neglect #womensrights #womenshealth #believewomen
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CW: rape, abuse, medical misogyny
The story of Gisele Pelicot has been haunting me ever since I heard about it.
For those who haven’t heard - Gisele was drugged by her husband and raped by over 80 men. He would invite them to come assault her while she was unconscious - and she only found out when police investigated him in connection with filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket.
I just found out that Gisele had gone to multiple doctors while the abuse was ongoing. She had concerns about blackouts, memory loss and vaginal bruising. She was dismissed every time. Told it was in her head or part of getting older.
This is why I talk about misogyny in medicine. About the importance of believing women and recognizing they’re the experts in their bodies. She KNEW something was wrong.
She couldn’t possibly know WHAT - because she was being drugged by a man she loved and trusted. But her body knew. So she went to get help from the doctors she trusted.
Imagine if they had really listened. If they had done a physical exam and found STIs? If they had done labs and found traces of drugs. It’s possible the doctors could have found evidence of abuse and stopped her from going home to a man who was causing her tremendous harm. At the very least there were enough warning signs to involve social work and investigate. The fact that the abuse went on for a decade and NO medical professional helped her? Its horrific.
They compounded her trauma by making her think it was all in her head (and at one point she was worried she was developing Alzheimer’s).
This is all too much. I feel overwhelmed with anger, sadness and grief for Gisele. For myself. For all women who’ve been victims of assault. For everyone who’s been dismissed and ignored by doctors they trusted to help them.
She is incredibly brave allowing her story and trial to be public - and I ask people not to look away. Say her name. Share her story. Let men know they WILL be held accountable. That we won’t suffer in shame and silence anymore.
Finally - to all the healthcare workers out there - please listen to your patients. Don’t dismiss someone without making sure you aren’t missing something. We can’t diagnose ourselves… we’re counting on you.
I found this article earlier which sums up a lot of what I’m feeling and can’t quite say yet: https://open.substack.com/pub/carolinecriadoperez/p/invisible-women-not-all-menbut-how?r=19dk2e&utm_medium=ios
#rape #abuse #consent #misogyny #notallmen #misogynyinmedicine #giselepelicot #bodilyautonomy #patriarchy #neglect #womensrights #womenshealth #believewomen
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CW: rape, abuse, medical misogyny
The story of Gisele Pelicot has been haunting me ever since I heard about it.
For those who haven’t heard - Gisele was drugged by her husband and raped by over 80 men. He would invite them to come assault her while she was unconscious - and she only found out when police investigated him in connection with filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket.
I just found out that Gisele had gone to multiple doctors while the abuse was ongoing. She had concerns about blackouts, memory loss and vaginal bruising. She was dismissed every time. Told it was in her head or part of getting older.
This is why I talk about misogyny in medicine. About the importance of believing women and recognizing they’re the experts in their bodies. She KNEW something was wrong.
She couldn’t possibly know WHAT - because she was being drugged by a man she loved and trusted. But her body knew. So she went to get help from the doctors she trusted.
Imagine if they had really listened. If they had done a physical exam and found STIs? If they had done labs and found traces of drugs. It’s possible the doctors could have found evidence of abuse and stopped her from going home to a man who was causing her tremendous harm. At the very least there were enough warning signs to involve social work and investigate. The fact that the abuse went on for a decade and NO medical professional helped her? Its horrific.
They compounded her trauma by making her think it was all in her head (and at one point she was worried she was developing Alzheimer’s).
This is all too much. I feel overwhelmed with anger, sadness and grief for Gisele. For myself. For all women who’ve been victims of assault. For everyone who’s been dismissed and ignored by doctors they trusted to help them.
She is incredibly brave allowing her story and trial to be public - and I ask people not to look away. Say her name. Share her story. Let men know they WILL be held accountable. That we won’t suffer in shame and silence anymore.
Finally - to all the healthcare workers out there - please listen to your patients. Don’t dismiss someone without making sure you aren’t missing something. We can’t diagnose ourselves… we’re counting on you.
I found this article earlier which sums up a lot of what I’m feeling and can’t quite say yet: https://open.substack.com/pub/carolinecriadoperez/p/invisible-women-not-all-menbut-how?r=19dk2e&utm_medium=ios
#rape #abuse #consent #misogyny #notallmen #misogynyinmedicine #giselepelicot #bodilyautonomy #patriarchy #neglect #womensrights #womenshealth #believewomen
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CW: rape, abuse, medical misogyny
The story of Gisele Pelicot has been haunting me ever since I heard about it.
For those who haven’t heard - Gisele was drugged by her husband and raped by over 80 men. He would invite them to come assault her while she was unconscious - and she only found out when police investigated him in connection with filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket.
I just found out that Gisele had gone to multiple doctors while the abuse was ongoing. She had concerns about blackouts, memory loss and vaginal bruising. She was dismissed every time. Told it was in her head or part of getting older.
This is why I talk about misogyny in medicine. About the importance of believing women and recognizing they’re the experts in their bodies. She KNEW something was wrong.
She couldn’t possibly know WHAT - because she was being drugged by a man she loved and trusted. But her body knew. So she went to get help from the doctors she trusted.
Imagine if they had really listened. If they had done a physical exam and found STIs? If they had done labs and found traces of drugs. It’s possible the doctors could have found evidence of abuse and stopped her from going home to a man who was causing her tremendous harm. At the very least there were enough warning signs to involve social work and investigate. The fact that the abuse went on for a decade and NO medical professional helped her? Its horrific.
They compounded her trauma by making her think it was all in her head (and at one point she was worried she was developing Alzheimer’s).
This is all too much. I feel overwhelmed with anger, sadness and grief for Gisele. For myself. For all women who’ve been victims of assault. For everyone who’s been dismissed and ignored by doctors they trusted to help them.
She is incredibly brave allowing her story and trial to be public - and I ask people not to look away. Say her name. Share her story. Let men know they WILL be held accountable. That we won’t suffer in shame and silence anymore.
Finally - to all the healthcare workers out there - please listen to your patients. Don’t dismiss someone without making sure you aren’t missing something. We can’t diagnose ourselves… we’re counting on you.
I found this article earlier which sums up a lot of what I’m feeling and can’t quite say yet: https://open.substack.com/pub/carolinecriadoperez/p/invisible-women-not-all-menbut-how?r=19dk2e&utm_medium=ios
#rape #abuse #consent #misogyny #notallmen #misogynyinmedicine #giselepelicot #bodilyautonomy #patriarchy #neglect #womensrights #womenshealth #believewomen
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Hemos lanzado un foro/wiki para crear la primera comunidad de usuarios #darktable en #español . Cualquier amante de la #FotografíaLibre es bienvenido. Acabamos de lanzarlo esta semana así que si quereis ayudar a empujar el fantastico #softwarelibre que es darktable os invito a que os registreis esta semana. Nos ayudaría mucho. Gracias!!
https://foro.darktable.org.es#foto #quitlightroom #quitadobe #spanish #discourse #raw #fotografía #opensource
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I just canceled my paid #lightroom subscription, and made an annual #donation to the #darktable for a similar amount. I now have two months to make my 40.000 #photo migration. It' feels great supporting a project that is not only #opensource but also far superior than the closed alternative. #photography #quitlightroom #quitadobe #foss
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I listened to Invisible Women by @ccriadoperez and I haven't recovered. Did you know women are 47% more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash because crash test dummies are male? This book is a masterclass in quiet, devastating proof. 🎧📊 #InvisibleWomen #FeministReads #BookReview
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I listened to Invisible Women by @ccriadoperez and I haven't recovered. Did you know women are 47% more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash because crash test dummies are male? This book is a masterclass in quiet, devastating proof. 🎧📊 #InvisibleWomen #FeministReads #BookReview
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I listened to Invisible Women by @ccriadoperez and I haven't recovered. Did you know women are 47% more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash because crash test dummies are male? This book is a masterclass in quiet, devastating proof. 🎧📊 #InvisibleWomen #FeministReads #BookReview
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I listened to Invisible Women by @ccriadoperez and I haven't recovered. Did you know women are 47% more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash because crash test dummies are male? This book is a masterclass in quiet, devastating proof. 🎧📊 #InvisibleWomen #FeministReads #BookReview
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I listened to Invisible Women by @ccriadoperez and I haven't recovered. Did you know women are 47% more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash because crash test dummies are male? This book is a masterclass in quiet, devastating proof. 🎧📊 #InvisibleWomen #FeministReads #BookReview
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I read Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez some time ago. Trying to use voice to text when I couldn't type in the earliest days after my broken wrist reminded me that gender bias is built into that system + so many others.
"AI systems misrecognize women’s voices and faces more often than men’s, which makes it more difficult for women to use these technologies and enjoy their benefits." ‐Rosalie Waelen and Michał Wieczorek
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13347-022-00548-w
#InvisibleWomen #GenderBias #accessibility -
RT @BettinaSchnerr
Unsichtbare Frauen (Sachbuch) - Caroline Criado-Perez. Wichtiges Dokument einer riesigen Datenlücke, das Versagen in Wissenschaft, Medizin, Politik und Gesellschaft aufzeigt und fragt, warum trotz Wissen im die Lücke nichts dagegen getan wird. #sbm20
https://www.daserste.de/information/wissen-kultur/ttt/sendung/ndr/frauen102.html -
Today I read the chapter "The Myth of Meritocracy" in Caroline Criado Perez' book "Invisible Women - Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed For Men".
It is a fascinating and dense collection of research, stats and data on why most of the fiercest advocates for "meritocracy" are most of the time biased against true merit-based systems.
#data #bias #feminist #technoscience (1/3)
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In lettura:
Invisibile women
Exposing data bias in a world designed for men
di Caroline Criado Perez -
In lettura:
Invisibile women
Exposing data bias in a world designed for men
di Caroline Criado Perez -
In lettura:
Invisibile women
Exposing data bias in a world designed for men
di Caroline Criado Perez -
In lettura:
Invisibile women
Exposing data bias in a world designed for men
di Caroline Criado Perez