Into the Valley
Tech Can’t Handle Criticism: A Conversation with Anna Wiener and Jessica Powell
The authors discuss sexism, power, and diversity in Silicon Valley
This article is part of Into the Valley, a feature series from OneZero about Silicon Valley, the people who live there, and the technology they create.
It’s fitting that the most-discussed book about technology of the young decade is not a behind-the-scenes startup story or a hagiography of a tech titan, but a memoir about navigating mid-2010s Silicon Valley as an outsider. Those were the years, after all, when many of tech’s promises began to curdle.
Anna Wiener’s Uncanny Valley follows her immersion into the industry at the apex of its disruptomania — her entry point into tech is through a job at Oyster, a short-lived startup that wanted to be “a Netflix for books” — on through to the disinformation-assisted election of Trump and a growing discomfort with ubiquitous digital platforms.
Few know those environments better than Jessica Powell, the former vice president of Google’s Communications department. At one point, Powell was one of the highest-ranking women at the company; after she left, she wrote The Big Disruption, an acerbic work of satire that lampoons a power-mad…