"Only men can do this job!"

Started by Old Man Whirly!1 pages

"Only men can do this job!"

https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/blogs/the-story-of-the-eccouncil-gender/

On Friday 09 April, EC-Council pushed out a ‘women in security’ survey poll on LinkedIn with three abhorrently sexist answer options. As the information security industry rallied to criticize this action, EC-Council blocked those daring to challenge and the subsequent outcry has dominated industry Twitter feeds. Eleanor Dallaway investigates…

On Friday April 09, in (an ironic) bid to promote an upcoming women in security webinar, EC-Council published a survey question on LinkedIn. I’ve shared the original tweet (Figure 1) as you have to see it to believe it. They asked: “What according to you are the most common challenges faced by women in the cybersecurity domain?”. The multiple choice answers? A: “Only men can do this job”, B: “Women can’t handle this job”, C: “Women aren’t encouraged enough.” 😂

We’ll get into the problematic (to say the least) answer choices shortly. What happened next is arguably just as shocking…

On seeing this question asked, many members of the infosec community called out this inexcusable survey question, responding to EC-Council with feedback and many calling for an apology, or at the very least, an explanation. Complaints were forthcoming, not just from women, but from everyone, united in disbelief and anger.

Wow, this can’t get any worse, right?

Wrong. On seeing the commotion and backlash, EC-Council responded by deleting and blocking those speaking out against them – but, from what I’ve personally seen and have heard from others, they only blocked women. 😂

Originally posted by Old Man Whirly!
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/blogs/the-story-of-the-eccouncil-gender/

On Friday 09 April, EC-Council pushed out a ‘women in security’ survey poll on LinkedIn with three abhorrently sexist answer options. As the information security industry rallied to criticize this action, EC-Council blocked those daring to challenge and the subsequent outcry has dominated industry Twitter feeds. Eleanor Dallaway investigates…

On Friday April 09, in (an ironic) bid to promote an upcoming women in security webinar, EC-Council published a survey question on LinkedIn. I’ve shared the original tweet (Figure 1) as you have to see it to believe it. They asked: “What according to you are the most common challenges faced by women in the cybersecurity domain?”.[B] The multiple choice answers? A: “Only men can do this job”, B: “Women can’t handle this job”, C: “Women aren’t encouraged enough.” 😂

We’ll get into the problematic (to say the least) answer choices shortly. What happened next is arguably just as shocking…

On seeing this question asked, many members of the infosec community called out this inexcusable survey question, responding to EC-Council with feedback and many calling for an apology, or at the very least, an explanation. Complaints were forthcoming, not just from women, but from everyone, united in disbelief and anger.

Wow, this can’t get any worse, right?

Wrong. On seeing the commotion and backlash, EC-Council responded by deleting and blocking those speaking out against them – but, from what I’ve personally seen and have heard from others, they only blocked women. 😂 [/B]

Sexism alive and well, pretty embarrasing.

The PR people should all be fired.

Or whoever thought this was a good idea, and managed the project.

Originally posted by cdtm
The PR people should all be fired.

Or whoever thought this was a good idea, and managed the project.

👆 Agreed!

Am I reading this wrong? It seems the answers are just examples of the reactions women get from men that are barriers to them. Like the answers are in quotation marks to show its supposed to be something women get said to them to discourage them from the field.

Originally posted by jaden_2.0
Am I reading this wrong? It seems the answers are just examples of the reactions women get from men that are barriers to them. Like the answers are in quotation marks to show its supposed to be something women get said to them to discourage them from the field.
I think you're reading it wrong.

🙂 or I did. The wording is bad either way tbh.

Originally posted by jaden_2.0
Am I reading this wrong? It seems the answers are just examples of the reactions women get from men that are barriers to them. Like the answers are in quotation marks to show its supposed to be something women get said to them to discourage them from the field.
Yeah if that was the implied desire the question should have been worded in a different way.

Tl;dr

"Professional conduct determines the credibility of a penetration tester."

"As a Licensed Penetration Tester, a dress code is important."

I like these people already. By the way, I choose answer B.