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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Tech company paid $3.2 million for Hillary Clinton that she could remind them to treat women better





Tech company paid more for performances Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, than in any other sector since the beginning of 2014.

Clinton earned $3.2 million from the technology sector over the past year and a half, according to The Washington Post. And Clinton talked about all kinds of things in front of a crowd of technologies-from Edward Snowden Ferguson, but she stopped on two subjects: the creation of opportunities for women in technology, and provide for Silicon Valley focuses on income inequality.

Clinton was paid to speak to eBay, Qualcomm, Nexenta, Cisco Systems, Salesforce.com, Xerox and more viewers from January 2014. Many of these performances was closed to the public and the press, but we planned it well visible from some of its more open lecture below .

Clinton said, "has never been a better time in history, was born a woman," she told the women-focused eBay conference in March.

She also said more must be done to correct the natural bias toward hiring and promoting more men than women. This is what Clinton said are "sewn" in American society.

Speaking to staff eBay, she stressed that the idea of ​​a diverse workforce leads to a diversity of ideas that lead to higher business productivity.

A year earlier, the Nexenta Systems Conference in San Francisco, Clinton praised Google, to personally urge women to work in the company. It seemed to show that women can interfere with study opportunities in tech with the male-dominated culture.

At the scene last August against an orange background Nexenta Clinton paid tribute to the many achievements of Silicon Valley has brought to the world. She praised the determination healthcare.gov, online marketplace of Health of the Government, the deployment of which was not exactly smooth. She extolled the benefits of cloud computing and the possibilities that come from the collection of large amounts of data.

Clinton said that technology companies are often more effective life, but the growth of these companies has coincided with an increased gap between the middle class and upper class Americans.

Better performance, in this case, does not necessarily lead to more wages.

"I think it's still true that many families in America today painfully from the great recession and society is falling apart at the seams, and the American dream of equality of opportunity and feels out of reach," Clinton said, according to The Wall Street Journal.

In a separate technology conference in San Francisco a few months ago, Clinton stressed how income inequality undermines democracy.

"We are experiencing a kind of inequality is bad for humans is bad for society, bad for democracy," she said, according to The New York Times. If Americans do not believe hard work leads to prosperity, they will put less faith in their country.

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