Business
Why We Need Black Computer Programmers
Rap Genius was made by two white guys. That fact alone should get the wheels turning in your head about why a startup funded to the tune of over $15 million wasn’t made by an enterprising group of African American programmers. And while Rap Genius’ third co-founder isn’t white, the fact that he isn’t black is far more important to consider.
Stories like this highlight opportunities that blacks unaware of the literal wealth of opportunity in the technology community are missing. In a world where simply having an idea called Clinkle and some concept art nets you $25 million—the largest seed round in Silicon Valley history—the barrier to entry into startup stardom seems laughably easy.
But once you get past the idea that creativity is key, the technical skills are essential. And therein lies the rub. The skills we need to nurture, like proficiency in math, science, and computer programming, are few and far between in the black community, although the number of programmers is growing daily thanks to the copious amount of resources available to them.
Black Enterprise’s Driving Innovation Hackathon was a success, with over a dozen programmers rallying together in less than three weeks to build amazing concepts that encourage environmental sustainability. And while everyone produced engaging apps in such a short span of time, I want to focus on a single entrant.
Elnerdo is a Mario clone that lets you clean up the polluted environment by jumping on top of some garbage monsters. The app won second place in the Hackathon, and was made by two black programmers who happened to be friends. It stood out to me not because of its originality or style, but because of what it—and the rest of the event—ultimately represented.
The lack of a multicultural influence in the technology we use and the games that we enjoy increasingly shape the culture of gaming and technology has already had unfavorable results. Black characters appear as gangsters a la Carl “CJ” Johnson in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, or worse, as racist caricatures like the trash-digging informant Letitia in Deus Ex: Human Revolution.
And with just 2 percent of game developers being black, and only 296 of 5,907 top managers and officials in Silicon Valley being black or Latino, we can’t expect that to change without becoming more involved in the industry in which we’re underrepresented.
