A UN report from May 2025 reveals AI in the workplace is nearly three times more likely to automate women’s jobs than men’s, primarily due to gender distribution in roles vulnerable to AI, such as white-collar positions where women hold 70% of jobs compared to men’s 50/50 split across white and blue-collar roles (Goldman Sachs data).
The report aligns with broader trends: AIPRM’s 2024 statistics show 8 out of 10 U.S. women are in occupations highly exposed to generative AI automation, versus 3 out of 5 men, highlighting how AI targets content-creation roles often occupied by women.
LinkedIn data from 2022-2023 shows men, particularly male millennials, dominate AI-related workplace conversations (58% vs. 31% women), suggesting men may be better positioned to adapt to AI demands, potentially widening the gender gap in job security.
@HamidFarhad33 Ehtesab doesn't have any features to record gender aparthied instances. We never planned it nor developed nor it was ever discussed internally. Ehtesab is closed as it was not being used by anyone plus some internal issues involving transparency
@HamidFarhad33 Ehtesab was never a startup, it was a join project by Sara Wahedi and NETLINKS. NETLINKS paid for the complete development and initial salaries of all staff including Sara Wahedi. It was an alert system to notify users of incident reports in Kabul only
Great leaders inspire and uplift their teams, fostering growth and success for everyone. Self-serving leaders, however, prioritize their own gains at the expense of others. @charmaghz @freshtakarim
@edwardburnettt@SaraWahedi The article though has some mistakes:
1. Ehtesab was launched in late 2020
2. Ehtesab was fully funded by @netlinksaf including Ms Sara's salary
3. Ehtesab app was developed by @netlinksaf
4. Ehtesab is not a separate company or a startup
@edwardburnettt@SaraWahedi We wish Ms Sara best of luck with her studies in Oxford. She has been instrumental in the initial startup of Ehtesab project.
@AfgPeaceful Ehtesab did not receive any fundings from any donors. The app was fully funded and developed by NETLINKS. A team of volunteers along with Sara Wahedi ran it as NETLINKS had no involvement in day to day operations of the app other than initial funding n dev
@HamidFarhad33 @SaraWahedi @netlinksaf NETLINKS is a known software development company in Afghanistan operating for over a decade. We financed development and sustainment of the app because of its public good features.
@younasejazi @nahafghan The app did receive a major update (app and website were completely rewritten) with new features and updates but never published by NETLINKS - the company behind the app development. As mentioned before, we will be releasing the complete code as an open source project.
@nahafghan @younasejazi FYI - except a gofundme initiative, Ehtesab has never received any fundings from any organization to the best of my knowledge. Ehtesab was never a separate registered entity but a project under NETLINKS so we would always know if there was fundings.
@younasejazi Yes, that is the plan. Our team at @netlinksaf are working to prepare the code for general purpose and publish it as an open source project in coming days
After years of serving as a civic engagement app in Afghanistan, @netlinksaf , the developer of #Ehtesab is closing its app and website. The decision aligns with the departure of Ehtesab project’s Co-founder, Ms. @SaraWahedi 1/5)
We will also release the latest version of Ehtesab website and app (which was never published online) on @github as an open source project. Anyone can implement it for their communities or help further develop it. (4/5)