Ivai Wear OS Fans Shouldn t Get Too Hyped Over an LTE Fossil Watch Just Yet releases, and approximately 144 hours later, Senator Ron Wyden D-Ore has tweeted that he, too, will be investigating the crapshoot mystery of Goldman Sachs allegedly sexist algorithm behind the Apple Card. Responding to several allegations that husbands tend to received higher credit limits than their wives, Goldman Sachs representatives have repeatedly stated to Gizmodo and other outlets that the company is blind to gende <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.it>stanley tumblers</a> r, race, marital status, and familial relationships. They surmise that the wives in question had perhaps been banking as secondary cardholders under their husbands accounts, ergot, they would not have accrued as long of a debt payment history. But you can certainly take it up with customer service. Wyden, the ranking member of <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley taza</a> the Senate Committee on Finance, seems to have noticed the story from a New York Times report: Im investigating whether these allegations are true. If they are, I expect Apple and Goldman Sachs to do everything in their power to <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.co.uk>stanley quencher</a> put an end to discrimination. mdash; Ron Wyden @RonWyden November 13, 2019 Wyden has lately taken up the bailiwick in fighting algorithmic bias. In April, he and Senator Corey Booker introduced the Algorithmic Accountability Act, which would obligate |