NHS services using Limbic's AI recorded significant improvements in accessibility for underrepresented groups. Non-binary patient referrals increased 179% and ethnic minority referrals increased 29%. The AI can classify mental health disorders with 93% accuracy and saved 430 weeks of patient waiting time within one month across four IAPTs.
In August 2025, Grab Malaysia introduced a feature letting customers request Mandarin-speaking drivers for a higher fare. Critics including the Association of Land Public Transport Transformation said it could lead to discrimination against non-Chinese drivers. Grab halted the trial after government warning.
compelled
The EPA ruled that xAI violated federal law by installing dozens of polluting methane gas turbines at its South Memphis data center without required permits or pollution controls. The NAACP filed a lawsuit on behalf of the predominantly Black community of Boxtown, which already faces cancer risk four times the national average. University of Tennessee research found nitrogen dioxide levels increased 79% in peak levels near the facility after operations began in June 2024.
negligent
On May 16, 2025, a court granted conditional certification for Mobley v. Workday to proceed as a nationwide collective action under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Derek Mobley claimed Workday's algorithms caused him to be rejected from more than 100 jobs over seven years because of his age, race, and disabilities. Workday disclosed that '1.1 billion applications were rejected' using its software tools, and the collective could potentially include 'hundreds of millions' of members. Workday denies the claims.
reactive
Oracle removed all mentions of the word 'diversity' from its corporate communications. The company also withdrew promised scholarship funding to the Urban League. On September 25, 2024, Oracle had confirmed a $20,000 contribution to support Urban League's educational initiatives, but later withdrew following internal DEI policy shifts.
On February 18, 2025, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative disbanded its diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility team, just 39 days after reassuring concerned staff on January 10 that Meta's DEI cuts would not affect CZI. CZI COO Marc Malandro cited 'the shifting regulatory and legal landscape.' CZI also canceled its $1.5 million Science Diversity Leadership Awards, ended its Diverse Slate Practice for hiring, scrubbed all DEI references from its website, and laid off staff working on affordable housing and economic inclusion. The move followed Meta's own DEI rollback and Zuckerberg's $1M Trump inauguration donation.
Graham published a widely-read essay titled 'The Origins of Wokeness' that described 'wokeness' as a 'mind virus' emerging from universities. The essay targeted BLM, Me Too movement, and DEI initiatives, and suggested organizations remove 'aggressively conventional-minded people.' Critics noted he erased the term's Black vernacular origins. A transgender YC alum said the essay 'creates the permission structure for people to discriminate against me.'
Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham publicly shared anti-DEI sentiments in 2024, questioning whether diversity funding metrics were excessive. Under CEO Garry Tan's leadership, YC has not emphasized diversity as a priority. Diversity metrics showed declining representation: the Summer 2022 batch had only 15% women founders (down from 17.9% prior cohort) and only 7% Black founders. As of 2025, only 11% of YC founders are women overall.
Snap published its 2024 Diversity Annual Report outlining goals to increase underrepresented U.S. racial and ethnic groups to 20% and increase women and underrepresented groups in leadership by 30% by 2025. The company supported 9+ Employee Resource Groups, partnered with UC Santa Barbara and USC for a first-of-its-kind representation audit of partnered content, committed to 50% diverse leads/showrunners in Snap Originals, and invested in the 523 program for Black creators. The company has a dedicated VP of DEI (Oona King).
Sage Group has maintained and expanded its DEI programs with specific measurable goals: achieving gender parity in VP+ roles globally by 2025, 25% representation of underrepresented groups in VP+ roles in North America, and 13% Black employees at all levels in the US for hiring managers. The company operates multiple Colleague Success Networks for Black, LatinX, Asian employees and gender equality.
Beginning late 2023, dozens of former American TCS employees filed EEOC complaints alleging systematic discrimination based on race, age, and national origin. Complainants - largely non-South Asian professionals over 40 - say TCS targeted them for layoffs while sparing Indian colleagues including H-1B visa workers. Key evidence: TCS global HR head Milind Lakkad told Indian news agency TCS wanted to reduce American employee percentage from 70% to 50% to 'offer opportunities to staff in India.' April 2024: US Representative Seth Moulton (D-MA) urged EEOC formal investigation, noting complainants were his constituents and suggested 'broader pattern of discrimination' and 'potential misuse of U.S. work visa programs.' October 2025: Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley and Ranking Member Dick Durbin questioned TCS about hiring 5,505 new H-1B workers in FY2025 while 'hundreds of thousands of American tech employees have been laid off.' Multiple class action lawsuits: Heldt (2015-2018, defense verdict), Katz (2022-2023, partially dismissed), Devorin (2024, pending). Investigation ongoing as of January 2026.
The EEOC charged that since 2015, Black employees at Tesla's Fremont factory endured racial abuse, including N-word variations, 'monkey,' and 'boy.' Employees encountered swastikas, threats, and nooses on desks, bathroom stalls, elevators, and even new vehicles on the production line. Case heading to mediation in early 2026.
Leaked internal Foxconn recruitment documents from 2023 contained explicit instructions to recruiters to reject applicants from Uyghur, Tibetan, Yi, and Hui ethnic backgrounds. The documents cited 'political risks' and 'management difficulties' as rationale. This systematic discrimination violates China's own labor laws and international human rights standards, and mirrors broader CCP policies targeting ethnic minorities.
Speaking at the New Criterion Gala, Thiel attacked diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives by comparing them to the Chinese Communist Party. He stated 'It would be healthier that, whenever someone mentions DEI, you just think CCP' and called diversity initiatives 'fundamentally reactionary.' This built on his 1995 book 'The Diversity Myth' co-authored with David Sacks.
Oracle CEO Safra Catz initiated and led a partnership with the United Negro College Fund over 20 years ago, through which the company has provided over $12 million in scholarships and internships. Oracle also created its first DE&I team in 2009, launched an Executive Diversity Council, and maintains multiple employee resource groups including networks for diverse abilities, LGBTQ+ employees, cultural harmony, indigenous employees, and intergenerational collaboration.
In December 2022, Musk dissolved Twitter's Trust and Safety Council, the advisory body responsible for policies on hate speech, child exploitation, and self-harm. This came amid a documented surge in hate speech following Musk's acquisition: the N-word saw a nearly 500% increase in usage in the 12 hours after the ownership transfer, antisemitic tweets mentioning 'Jew' rose fivefold, and anti-Black slurs appeared at nearly 3x the pre-acquisition rate. Homophobic and transphobic slurs rose 52% and 62% respectively, per CCDH research.
$830.0M
Intel Capital pledged in 2015 to invest $125 million over 5 years in startups led by underrepresented minorities, including women, Black, Latino, U.S. military veterans, LGBTQ+, and permanently physically disabled founders. By December 2022, Intel Capital had invested over $830 million in companies with diverse leadership teams, far exceeding the original pledge. Intel also achieved $1 billion in annual spending with diverse suppliers and reached 5 million women through technology empowerment programs.
negligent
Multiple studies documented sustained increases in hate speech following Musk's takeover. Anti-Black slurs tripled from 1,282 to 3,876/day, antisemitic posts rose 61% in two weeks, and anti-LGBTQ 'grooming' content increased 119%. A UC Berkeley study published in PLOS One confirmed the 50% hate speech increase persisted through at least May 2023, contradicting X's claims that hate speech decreased.
$30.0M
Since 2021, Adobe and the Adobe Foundation launched the Equity and Advancement Initiative (EAI) to address educational inequities and promote diversity in tech and creative industries. The Foundation partnered with 11 nonprofit organizations addressing social and racial justice issues, donating $30 million plus Adobe product donations. In 2024, the Foundation announced an additional $5 million in continued fourth-year funding. Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen joined CEO Action for Diversity & Inclusion, and the company became a founding member of Parity.org.
As YC's Managing Director, Seibel led efforts to significantly increase diversity among YC-funded startups. Under his leadership from 2014-2024, YC funded over 500 female founders, 200+ Black founders, and approximately 300 Latine founders. He stated 'You change the stats by funding people.'