The
terms had appeared in some of the bank's technology policies,
standards and control procedures, as well in the programming
code that runs some of its processes, one of the sources said.
Other companies like Twitter Inc <TWTR.K> and GitHub Inc adopted
similar changes, prompted by the renewed spotlight on racism
after the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died in police
custody in Minneapolis in May.
https://twitter.com/TwitterEng/
status/1278733303508418560
The phrases "master" and "slave" code or drive are used in some
programming languages and computer hardware to describe one part
of a device or process that controls another.
"Blacklist" is used to describe items that are automatically
denied, like a list of websites forbidden by a company's
cybersecurity division. "Whitelist" means the opposite - a list
of items automatically approved.
Floyd's death has sparked a re-examination of words that might
carry racial overtones. For example, some realtors are no longer
using the term "master bedroom," and Universal Music Group's
Republic Records stopped using the word "urban" to describe
music genres and internal departments or roles.
JPMorgan appears to be the first in the financial sector to
remove most references to these racially problematic phrases,
and it comes after the bank has said it is taking other steps to
promote Black professionals and anti-bias culture training for
staff.
Columbia Business School programming professor Mattan Griffel
said such terms have long been controversial and can be
difficult to change.
The technology that underpins bank operations is often a
spaghetti-like mess that results from merged companies,
decades-old code and third-party systems, and any change can
have cascading effects that are difficult to predict, Griffel
said.
Changing these terms within the bank's code could take millions
of dollars and months of work, Griffel said.
"This is not a trivial" investment by the bank, Griffel said.
"This kind of language and terminology is so entrenched. It has
to (change) and now is as good a time as any."
(Reporting By Elizabeth Dilts Marshall in New York; Additional
reporting by Paresh Dave in San Francisco; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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