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She served multiple roles at Cisco, including co-founding their Women in Cybersecurity program, as she is a frequent speaker on gender diversity [4] and acknowledged the gender gap in the field of cybersecurity. While at Cisco, she co-authored Security Principles for the Enterprise Architecture Practice. [5]
The gender pay gap in the United States tech industry is the divergence in pay between men and women who work in areas such as software engineering. [1] In 2018, reports show that for every dollar the average man made, women only made 82 cents, and women from underrepresented communities earn even less. [2]
Women in CyberSecurity (WiCyS) [1] [2] is a 501(c)(3) non-profit aimed at supporting the recruitment, retention and advancement of women in cybersecurity. [3] It is a global community of men and women dedicated to bringing talented women and under-represented groups together to fill the cybersecurity jobs gap [4] and make the field of cybersecurity more inclusive.
This year, according to Payscale’s 2023 Gender Pay Gap Report, the disparity between men and women’s earnings still costs women $90,000 over their lifetime. But the actual reason for pay ...
Gender disparity in computing concerns the disparity between the number of men in the field of computing in relation to the lack of women in the field. Originally, computing was seen as a female occupation. As the field evolved, so too did the demographics, and the gender gap shifted from female dominated to male dominated.
Women workers on average make 83 cents on the dollar compared to men, according to the new 2024 Gender Pay Gap Report by Payscale, a compensation data, software and services provider.
In a separate report, the AAUW found women physicians and surgeons only earn 71 cents for every dollar men earn in the same fields, and women financial managers suffer an even wider gender wage ...
For example, the gender gap in internet penetration is around 17% in the Arab States and the Asia and Pacific region, [20] whereas the gender gap in ICT skills is as high as 25% in some Asian and Middle Eastern countries. [21] In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the Internet penetration rate in 2019 was 33.8 percent for men and 22.6 percent for women.