An online developers conference was canceled after several tech executives pulled out of the event following accusations that the organizer fabricated female speakers' profiles. High-profile engineering leaders in the developer community — including Microsoft Corp.'s Scott Hanselman and Kelsey Hightower, a former developer advocate at Alphabet Inc's Google — withdrew on Monday from DevTernity, where tickets were sold for as much as $870.
The event's organizer, Eduards Sizovs, confirmed the cancellation of the event. “It looks like someone really wanted to deliberately damage the conference,“ he said in an emailed statement. Sizovs earlier said in a post on X that he “auto-generated” a fake woman's profile after a female speaker had dropped out of the conference, but that it was a placeholder and not meant to imply a more diverse conference. He later removed the fake profile.
The outcry began after participants discovered fake profiles late last week when Gergely Orosz, who runs a popular tech newsletter, posted on social media that he had identified fabricated profiles of women on DevTernity's speakers list and notified attendees. He also claimed to have found fake women's profiles on the speakers lists for previous and future events. Women who had previously dropped out of the conference or declined to speak were also not removed from the event's website.
It struck a chord with the developer community, which saw the practice as misleading and potentially deceitful, and a step backward from their goal of diversity in male-dominated tech events.
Nearly half of the 23 speakers still listed on the event's website had already withdrawn from the conference before the event was cancelled. That includes Amazon Web Services'
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