She’s 26, and Brought Down Uber’s C.E.O. What’s Next? I would see people who would get harassed or made fun of or bullied and they would go report it, and they would just get ground down by upper management and H. R. And so I felt like, if I can take this on despite the consequences, then I should do it.” Like women in Hollywood I talked to after the Weinstein collapse, Ms. Fowler thought the new outspokenness in Silicon Valley on sexual harassment may have been spurred by the election of President Trump. K., well, then, could you please go and say publicly, “Whoever’s doing this, stop,” if somebody is?’” Ms. Huffington told me that “the board had a complete assurance from management that nothing was done like that or would be.” Speaking to The Wall Street Journal earlier this month, Ms. Hornsey, who joined Uber a month after Ms. Fowler left and a month before the famous blog post, was asked if she had ever reached out to Ms. Fowler.
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