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Pay equality

Posted by Lizzie on Sep-5-2008

There’s a lot of talk about women’s issues this election cycle. Thanks to Hillary Clinton, and now Sarah Palin, we’re back in the spotlight. In that vein, Congress is pressing for a revote on the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which failed to pass previously. McCain has come out again it:

“I am all in favor of pay equity for women, but this kind of legislation, as is typical of what’s being proposed by my friends on the other side of the aisle, opens us up to lawsuits for all kinds of problems,” the expected GOP presidential nominee told reporters. “This is government playing a much, much greater role in the business of a private enterprise system.”

I’ve recently engaged in a half-hearted IT job search - in anticipation of my eventual graduation from the Tech program. There seems to be a little available, but I’ve heard that women are not treated favorably in the IT industry. It would please me, and thousands of other women, tremendously if this actually became law. Would I know that my male counterparts were making more than me? Probably not. But this act would give me recourse should I find out about a pay discrepancy after the fact. As a woman hoping to work in a male-dominated field, I would feel just a little better knowing I had a safety net.

There was some talk that this law isn’t necessary. I beg to differ. I worked with a company (unrelated to the tech field) that cut me a mystery check. When I inquired to what the purpose of the check was, I was told that it was to make up for a pay difference between me and my male counterparts. I had no idea that the men were making that much more per hour than I was, but there was a lawsuit and the settlement agreement was that this company would pay the hourly difference to each female for whatever period of time they agreed to (I think it was 3 months, even though I’d been there for over a year at that point). I left that company not long afterward, but my eyes had been opened. The reasoning for the lower pay was that women are mothers and so are prone to miss work because of their sick children. Men, on the other hand, are more reliable and should be rewarded. Really?

At a time when a major political party has nominated a self-proclaimed “hockey mom” to be vice president, there should be no more “she should get less because she’s a mom”. This woman is seeking a job while parenting 5 children (and potentially helping parent a grandchild) so the reason listed above would apply to her and her pay should be cut significantly. Right? No. Wrong. Her husband will be able to tend to the children while she runs for office and he can tend to the children while she continues to govern Alaska (except that he’s got a full-time job plus an extra job on the side in the summer, but that’s not this issue). It’s only fair that the rest of American women enjoy the same equality in pay as the women who govern them.

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Oct
16

Answers.com Gets Sweet Deal

Posted by Lizzie

WordPress.com, together with Alex King, have rolled out a new plugin that allows for content to be linked directly to Answers.com. The name? AnswerLinks, of course. It’s available to WordPress.com users and as a plugin to self-hosted WordPress blogs. According to the official WordPress.com blog:

AnswerLinks will find words in your post that might benefit from a definition and ask you if you’d like to turn them into links like Artie Shaw and Turmeric. Easy as that!Answers.com gets their definition data from places like Wikipedia, Encyclopedia Britannica, and the American Heritage Dictionary.

Quite simply, if you have a word in your post that AnswerLinks thinks should be defined, it offers to create a link to an Answers.com definition. Your reader then clicks on the link and is taken to to the definition. Pretty straight forward and innocent. Right? Not according to at least one blogger.

Andy Beard suggests that there may be some money flowing behind the scenes. He wonders why other plugins that offer to take readers away (via links) to other sites, such as Wiki and shopping sites, haven’t been included in available plugins for WordPress.com users. With so many blogs using the AnswerLinks, the link “juice” for Answers.com would be phenomenal. Andy mentions that users may want the ability to add “rel=nofollow” to the links going to Answers.com. However, many WordPress.com and self-hosted WordPress bloggers just don’t understand the importance of the “rel=nofollow” tag and most likely wouldn’t bother applying it to the outgoing links. Thus, Answers.com gets a huge benefit from the AnswerLinks plugin.

If Auttomatic did receive a financial incentive for installing AnswerLinks, should they then let the WordPress community know this? WordPress.com and Blog-daddy Matt Mullenweg have be very adamant about keeping the Themes codex sponsor free and refusing to allow WordPress.com users to monetize their blogs. Because of this some bloggers feel that the deal (or lack thereof) should be made public and are questioning the ethics of Auttomatic as a whole.

Regardless of the specifics of the deal, Answers.com stands to gain a windfall in “link love” from unsuspecting bloggers. And bloggers who have been much against placing ads on their blogs may be unintentionally doing just that by adding the AnswerLinks plugin to their blogs. Could that knowledge drive WordPress.com bloggers to other platforms? It certainly could be a reason that Auttomatic doesn’t have much to say about it.

I personally don’t see anything wrong with Auttomatic taking money for anything. It’s a company and they can’t stay a company without some kind of incoming moolah. And I don’t see anything wrong with them employing a plugin to give another site some serious link love. I will continue to use my WordPress because, quite honestly, it’s the best there is. My opinion about WordPress.com, though… Well, that’s why I don’t use WordPress.com, isn’t it? :)

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