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Tech evangelist Robert Scoble 'rejected' lawyer's advice, denies sexual harassment allegations

Becky Peterson   

Tech evangelist Robert Scoble 'rejected' lawyer's advice, denies sexual harassment allegations
Tech2 min read

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JD Lasica licensed under CC BY 2.0

Tech blogger Robert Scoble is denying allegations he sexually harassed women.

  • Tech evangelist Robert Scoble took to his blog Wednesday to refute several reports that he had acted inappropriately toward women in professional environments.
  • Scoble accused the women that spoke out against him of selling a "false narrative."
  • He claims he couldn't have sexually harassed the women because he wasn't their employer and didn't "cut checks."

Accused of sexually harassing multiple women in the tech community, tech blogger Robert Scoble on Wednesday denied the reports on the grounds that he was not an employer of the women accusing him or an investor in their businesses.

In a blog post on his personal website, Scoble, who rose to prominence as a vocal advocate of cutting edge tech gadgets such as Google Glass, said he had "rejected [his] lawyer's advice to not make a statement." He proceeded to dispute numerous news reports - including stories in Business Insider - regarding the alleged sexual misconduct and his resignation that followed.

"If I were guilty of all the things said about me I would still not be in a position to have sexually harassed anyone," Scoble wrote. "I don't have employees, I don't cut checks for investment. None of the women who came forward were ever in a position where I could make or break their careers. Sexual harassment requires that I have such power."

The allegations against Scoble came to light last week after tech journalist Quinn Norton wrote that Scoble grabbed her "butt" and one of her breasts during the Foo Camp hacker conference in 2010. A second woman, Michelle Greer, shared a similar story with BuzzFeed News on Thursday about being groped by Scoble at a tech conference while they were both employees at Rackspace.

In addition to denying that his actions count as sexual harassment, Scoble wrote that "each of the women who have come forward used grains of truth to sell false narrative."

"Perhaps because they felt peer pressure to join the #MeToo bandwagon, perhaps because they felt slighted for other reasons. I won't speculate on their motives," Scoble wrote, referencing the hashtag that went viral this month as women spoke openly about their experiences with harassment and assault on social media following several high-profile stories of sexual misconduct in the news.

On Sunday, Scoble resigned from his role as partner at Transformation Group, a startup that focuses on augmented and virtual reality, which he founded in May with Shel Israel. Israel announced Scoble's resignation in a Facebook post.

In his blog post Wednesday, Scoble also denied some of what Israel wrote, including that Scoble had admitted that the claims against him were "for the most part true."

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