Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I love video games dearly.
Sometimes I speak out on women in tech issues.
I don't regret standing up to Gamergate at all.
Gamergate is a criminal operation to harass women.
Software increasingly defines the world around us.
In politics, I am facing a lot of structural sexism.
If you don't know what Gamergate is, my God, do I envy you.
I was adopted into an extremely right-wing religious family.
GamerGate has had an almost indescribable toll on my family.
The public will forgive you almost anything if you're honest about it.
I don't want to be a hardware engineer. That seems like a terrible job.
Even when the nation's leaders acknowledge tech issues, details are lacking.
My capacity to feel fear has worn out, as if it's a muscle that can do no more.
The BBC called me 'defiant' in a caption. I plan to frame and put it on my wall.
The tech industry has a strong bias towards technical solutions to social problems.
Without competition, Silicon Valley will stop taking risks and will stop innovating.
I am a software engineer, a popular public speaker, and an expert in the Unreal engine.
There are some men that are very threatened by the fact that women play games nowadays.
I love people that kind of have those life experiences that take them different places.
My dad is in Mississippi. He exited the Navy and made a ton of money as an entrepreneur.
Any reasonable person can look at video games and see that we don't represent women well.
It's sad when 'Grand Theft Auto' has more consequences for criminal behavior than real life.
When I was a teenager, the most valuable American companies were in finance and manufacturing.
To stand up to GamerGate, that's my choice. I can't make that choice for the women I work with.
I've rarely talked about Obama's share of the blame for the rise of the alt-right and Gamergate.
Ordinarily, I develop videogames with female characters that aren't girlfriends, bimbos and sidekicks.
The main lesson I took from Gamergate is that asking the status quo to do the right thing doesn't work.
If you're fortunate enough not to know, Gamergate is the misogynist hate group of the video game world.
Gamergate has grown into a hate group that threatens the stability of the $60 billion a year game industry.
There's a real sense - that we have to get past on the left - that every person who voted for Trump is evil.
We need to invest in telecommunication infrastructure with redundancies to combat denial of service attacks.
We need to introduce civil liability for companies that ship products with reckless security vulnerabilities.
I think Gamergate is just a symptom of a disease: a $90 billion global industry that was built by men for men.
Gamergate isn't the problem - it's a symptom of an industry that is deeply sexist and unable to understand it.
I say this as an engineer: We are profoundly bad at asking ourselves how the things we build could be misused.
I'm a reasonably accomplished journalist. I've worked as an investigative journalist, I've done crime beat stuff.
In stopping Gamergate, the men who dominate it - not just women - must address the culture that created Gamergate.
I have an unfortunate history with Ethan Ralph. Like many women in the game industry, I've been doxed by him multiple times.
Competition in the American tech sector is being gobbled up by the largest players, and it's threatening our entire industry.
If you run a website where people can congregate, you have a moral responsibility to make sure that community is not harassed.
It's see no evil, hear no evil with toxic male gamers - whose every whim and adolescent fantasy has been catered to for decades.
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 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.
Gamergate gave birth to a new kind of celebrity troll, men who made money and built their careers by destroying women's reputations.
Gamergate should have been a time of reckoning for the gaming community, which had long been rife with sexism and misogyny. It wasn't.
To its credit, Twitter is at least making an effort to curb hate speech towards transgender people, training its staff how to respond.
Most members of Gamergate, the alt-right movement best known for harassing women in the game industry, operate under a veil of anonymity.
With major films costing hundreds of millions of dollars to make, Hollywood is an industry that tends to repeat patterns when they make money.
The real question is whether or not the communities that rule the Internet can make their spaces safer for users, especially women and minorities.
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.