Tools & Platforms
AI is Creating a New Gender Divide

The AI revolution isn’t ahead of us; it’s here. But, for a technology that’s been heralded as the future, it risks bringing with it problems from the past.
Women are adopting generative AI technology at a slower rate than men—data from the Survey of Consumer Expectations found that 50 percent of men are using generative AI tools, compared to 37 percent of women. Further research from Harvard Business School Associate Professor Rembrand Koning found that women are adopting AI tools at a 25 percent lower rate.
So, what’s behind women’s hesitation to adopt AI?
Whether it’s deepfake pornography, discrimination from AI hiring technology, or forms of digital violence online, research and data suggest that women have a fundamentally different relationship to AI than men do. The result? An AI gender gap, where women are being left behind in the technological revolution.
Newsweek spoke to the experts to find out more about how AI’s misogyny maintenance is creating a new gender divide.
What Is The AI Gender Gap?
A 2025 survey from the National Organization for Women (NOW) and Icogni found that 25 percent of women had experienced harassment enabled by technology, including AI-generated deepfake pornography. A study from the Berkeley Haas Center for Equity, Gender, and Leadership, meanwhile, analyzed 133 AI systems from different industries. It found that 44 percent showed gender bias.
Beyond the studies and the data, what is the actual impact of this gender disparity on women?
Enter: the AI gender gap.
Professor Ganna Pogrebna, Lead for Behavioral Data Science at the Alan Turing Institute and Executive Director at the AI and Cyber Futures Institute, told Newsweek over email, “There is mounting evidence that early negative experiences with AI systems—particularly those involving misogyny, sexualization, or coercion—can have profound psychological, behavioral, and societal consequences for women and girls.”
“These harms are not abstract; they are embodied in concrete experiences, amplified through algorithmic systems,” Pogrebna said.
And AI-inflicted harms begin at a young age. A 2024 report from the Center for Democracy & Technology found that generative AI technologies are worsening the sharing of non-consensual intimate imagery in schools and that female students are most often depicted in this deepfake imagery.
So, what might be the long-term impacts on women and girls if they are having negative or traumatic experiences with AI?
Laura Bates, activist and author of The New Age of Sexism: How AI and Emerging Technologies Are Reinventing Misogyny, told Newsweek, “I think we will see a widening gap in terms of women’s access to and uptake of new technologies.”
Bates said that this will include AI and that this will have “a devastating impact on everything from women’s job prospects and careers to their involvement in further developments in the sector, which will, in turn, continue to intensify the problem because it will mean that new tools are tailored towards men as the majority of users.”
Asked if there is a risk that these negative experiences could lead to disengagement with future technologies, putting women on the back foot, Bates said, “Absolutely.”
“We already see how differently men and women use and experience existing forms of technology,” Bates said. Both men and women experience forms of online harassment, according to the Pew Research Centre, which found in 2021 that 41 percent of Americans had experienced some kind of harassment online; harassment takes different forms. The Pew Research Centre found that 33 percent of women under 35 report experiencing sexual harassment online, compared to 11 percent of men, a figure which doubled from 2017 to 2021.
“Women’s use of tech is mediated by an entirely different online experience than men’s, marked by abuse, harassment, doxing, threats, stalking and other forms of tech facilitated gender-based violence,” Bates said, adding, “It is inevitable that the barrage of abuse women and girls face online, combined with the gender bias inherently baked into many emerging tools, are going to have a chilling effect in terms of women’s uptake and participation in new forms of tech.”
Pogrebna echoed this: “These traumatic experiences can embed deep mistrust in AI systems and digital institutions.”

FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images
Newsweek also spoke with Dr. Sarah Myers West, co-executive director at the AI Now Institute. In a phone call with Newsweek, she said, “There are disproportionate patterns of reinforcing inequality in ways that lead to harm for women and girls and people of other minorities.”
West pointed to “the way AI is intermediating access to our resources or our life chances,” and noted, “the AI that gets used, say, in a hiring process and reinforces is historical employment-based discrimination.” West said that this is affecting people in ways that are “profoundly consequential.”
In 2018, Reuters reported that Amazon had scrapped an AI recruiting tool that was showing bias against women. In 2024, UNESCO’s research highlighted that gender bias in AI hiring tools may penalize women through the reproduction of regressive stereotypes.
Asked if negative experiences with AI in hiring scenarios could lead to a sense of mistrust and disengagement, West said, “I think rightly so, if it’s being used in that way.”
A Problem from the Past, Reinvented for the Future
AI might be increasingly prevalent, but the discourse over it is increasingly polarized. A 2025 survey from YouGov found that one-third of Americans are concerned about the possibility that AI will cause the end of the human race. Additionally, the survey found that Americans are more likely to say that AI will have a negative effect on society than on their own life and that most Americans don’t trust AI to make ethical decisions.
But as these apocalyptic alarms sound, concerns over how AI is further encoding misogyny into the fabric of society fall through the cracks. Back in 2024, a report from the UN said that AI is mirroring gendered bias in society, and gender disparity is already pronounced in the tech industry, with the World Economic Forum reporting in 2023 that women account for only 29 percent of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) workers.
“There is a growing body of evidence showing that AI systems reflect and amplify biases present in the datasets on which they are trained. This includes gender biases, sexualization of women, and reinforcement of harmful stereotypes,” Pogrebna said. She added that large language models trained on “internet corpora” are risking “encoding toxic gender stereotypes and normalizing misogynistic narratives.”
A 2024 report from UNESCO found that “AI-based systems often perpetuate (and even scale and amplify) human, structural and social biases,” producing gender bias, as well as homophobia and racial stereotyping.
Newsweek spoke with Sandra Wachter, a professor of technology and regulation at the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, about this.
“If AI is somewhat a mirror of society,” Wachter said, “It kind of indirectly shows you where your place in the world is.”
Wachter then pointed to examples of gender bias in AI, including bias in image generators and text prediction, where AI is more likely to assume a male gender for professions like doctors, and a female gender for professions like nurses. A 2024 study in the JAMA Open Network found that when generating images of physicians, AI text-to-image generators are more likely to depict people who are white and male.
“It’s a tacit kind of reminder that certain spots are reserved for you and others are not,” Wachter said. “We have to think about what it does to young women and girls.”
“How can we praise the technology to be so perfect when it is so problematic for a large portion of our society, right? And just ask the question, who is this technology actually good for? And who does it actually benefit?” Wachter said. She added, “It gives people a very early idea of what your role is supposed to look like in society.”
Pointing to the issues with AI, Wachter said, “We would never do this with a car, right? We would never just say, you go and drive. I know it’s failing all the time.”
“What does it say about the value of being a woman?” she said. “If it’s okay that this injury will happen, we know it will happen, but we’re going to bring it on the market anyway, and we’re going to fix it later.”
Newsweek also spoke with Dr. Kanta Dihal, a lecturer in science communication at Imperial College London, who shared some of the concerns that Wachter does. “There is so much that regularly goes wrong around the topics of women and technology in the broader sense,” Dihal said.
In terms of the relationship women have with AI, Dihal said there is a feeling of “Is this for me, or is this meant to keep me in my place? Or make things worse for me? Am I the kind of person that the creators of this technology had in mind when they designed it?”
“So many different career paths and our schools as well are indeed introducing AI related technologies that if you don’t want to use them, you’re already sometimes on the back foot,” Dihal said, adding, “It’s going to be both a matter of being disadvantaged in school and career progression.”

Emanuele Cremaschi/Getty Images
Looking Ahead
So, what would inclusion in AI look like?
Bates told Newsweek that we need to see government regulation of AI technology “at the point they are rolled out to public or corporate use” in order to ensure that safety and ethics standards are met before implementation, “not after women and marginalized communities have already faced significant discrimination.”
She added, “With AI technologies poised to become inextricably intertwined with almost every aspect of our personal and professional lives, that must change in order to ensure that women, girls, and marginalized groups are able to reap the same benefits from these technologies as everybody else, without suffering negative consequences.”
Meanwhile, Pogrebna told Newsweek, “The marginalisation of women in AI is not an inevitable by-product of technological advancement—it is the result of design choices, governance gaps, and historical inequities embedded in data and institutions. A multi-pronged approach that includes technical, procedural, legal, and cultural reforms is not only possible but has already demonstrated early success in multiple domains.”
She added that technical fixes are necessary but insufficient without regulatory frameworks to enforce accountability.
As AI technology continues to develop and become more prevalent, it’s clear that the fabric of society continues to change at a rapid pace, and the dream of a tech revolution that leads to a fairer society is still there. What’s unclear is if AI is doomed to code a world that’s bugged with the same prejudice as the one that came before it.
Tools & Platforms
Check Point acquires AI security firm Lakera in push for enterprise AI protection

Check Point Software Technologies announced Monday it will acquire Lakera, a specialized artificial intelligence security platform, as entrenched cybersecurity companies continue to expand their offerings to match the generative AI boom.
The deal, expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2025, positions Check Point to offer what the company describes as an “end-to-end AI security solution.” Financial terms were not disclosed.
The acquisition reflects growing concerns about security risks as companies integrate large language models, generative AI, and autonomous agents into core business operations. These technologies introduce potential attack vectors including data exposure, model manipulation, and risks from multi-agent collaboration systems.
“AI is transforming every business process, but it also introduces new attack surfaces,” said Check Point CEO Nadav Zafrir. The company chose Lakera for its AI-native security approach and performance capabilities, he said.
Lakera, founded by former AI specialists from Google and Meta, operates out of both Zurich and San Francisco. The company’s platform provides real-time protection for AI applications, claiming detection rates above 98% with response times under 50 milliseconds and false positive rates below 0.5%.
The startup’s flagship products, Lakera Red and Lakera Guard, offer pre-deployment security assessments and runtime enforcement to protect AI models and applications. The platform supports more than 100 languages and serves Fortune 500 companies globally. The company also operates what it calls Gandalf, an adversarial AI network that has generated more than 80 million attack patterns to test AI defenses. This continuous testing approach helps the platform adapt to emerging threats.
David Haber, Lakera’s co-founder and CEO, said joining Check Point will accelerate the company’s global mission to protect AI applications with the speed and accuracy enterprises require.
Check Point already offers AI-related security through its GenAI Protect service and other AI-powered defenses for applications, cloud systems, and endpoints. The Lakera acquisition extends these capabilities to cover the full AI lifecycle, from models to data to autonomous agents.
Upon completion of the deal, Lakera will form the foundation of Check Point’s Global Center of Excellence for AI Security. The integration aims to accelerate AI security research and development across Check Point’s broader security platform.
The acquisition is another in a flurry of bigger cybersecurity companies moving to acquire AI-focused startups. Earlier this month, F5 acquired CalypsoAI, Cato Networks acquired Aim Security, and Varonis acquired SlashNext.
The deal remains subject to customary closing conditions.
Tools & Platforms
Commure to Embed Ambient AI into MEDITECH Expanse Now Mobile EHR

What You Should Know:
– Commure, a healthcare technology company, has announced the direct embedding of its Ambient technology within MEDITECH Expanse Now, the physician’s mobile application in the MEDITECH Expanse EHR platform.
– The collaboration empowers healthcare organizations using Expanse Now to streamline clinical documentation and reduce administrative burdens, which allows clinicians to focus more fully on patient care within their familiar mobile workflows. This solution is now available to early adopters, with general availability to follow.
A New Era for Clinical Documentation
Commure’s Ambient technology is designed to deliver real-time, AI-powered clinical documentation that fits naturally into the clinician’s workflow. By intelligently capturing and structuring patient-clinician conversations, the solution saves providers an average of 90 minutes per day. This helps reduce cognitive overload and enables clinicians to stay present with their patients.
Seamless Integration and Strategic Advantages
This integration is part of Commure’s comprehensive suite of ambient documentation solutions that address workforce shortages, inefficiencies, and administrative burdens. The Ambient Suite keeps clinicians in their workflow, supports customization and quality capture, and extends across various care settings, including ambulatory environments and the emergency department. Built with Commure’s revenue cycle expertise, the Ambient Suite enhances documentation quality by leveraging both clinical and financial insights.
The embedded offering in Expanse Now complements other previously released ambient mobile and web application options that also make use of deep bidirectional integration with MEDITECH Expanse. Commure works directly with clinicians and administrators to boost margins, reduce burdens, and improve patient engagement. The company integrates with over 60 EHRs and powers millions of encounters annually.Ian Shakil, Chief Strategy Officer of Commure, stated that integrating the company’s Ambient AI technology directly within MEDITECH Expanse Now is a significant step forward in their mission to transform healthcare organizations into “the most advanced, intelligent, and human-centered systems”. The integration uses gold-standard technology to securely exchange data and accurately upload the generated notes back into discrete sections of MEDITECH Expanse.
Tools & Platforms
AI will define housing in 2025 and beyond

Throughout September, nominations are open for the 2025 Tech Trendsetters award, celebrating the visionaries who spearhead innovation in housing technology.
As HousingWire opens the floor for the 2025 nominations, one clear theme from past winners emerges: the transformative power of artificial intelligence (AI) . From underwriting to compliance and customer experience, AI is reshaping the operations of the mortgage and real estate sectors.
To spotlight this evolution, we reached out to previous Tech Trendsetters for their insights on the technologies set to define the next five years. Here’s what they shared:
“AI-powered automation will fundamentally reshape the mortgage and real estate ecosystem by streamlining underwriting, risk assessment and customer engagement. The goal is to reduce friction and improve accuracy, creating more personalized experiences for everyone involved. The companies that effectively leverage AI to drive these improvements will be the winners in the coming years.” — Lee Maliniak — chief product officer at Matic

“Agentic AI will fundamentally reshape our industry in the next five years. It offers the promise of freeing us up to spend more time and resources delivering custom homebuying journeys powered by autonomous AI agents, designed to address each borrower’s unique situation and needs — and drive greater brand loyalty down the road.” — Praveen Chandramohan — senior vice president of origination growth solutions at Cotality

“Agentic AI. Not another chatbot. A system that takes a goal and executes across tools without handholding. In real estate, that means a listing launch that drafts the brief, builds compliant creative, books the ads, updates the website and schedules follow-ups. In mortgage, it assembles docs, verifies data, prices scenarios and moves the file through conditions. Forget five years — I think we are close to this.” — Lindsay Listanski, national vice president of marketing at Coldwell Banker

“I project that AI will permeate the mortgage space and be leveraged heavily starting with operational efficiency for repetitive tasks and then encompassing lead generation, QC processing, help desk support and compliance. Expect it to heavily shape our industry in transformational ways in the next several years.” — Eric Lyon, SVP and single-family business technology officer at Freddie Mac

“AI-powered underwriting and property valuation will not only accelerate approvals but also improve risk assessment, opening the door for more equitable access to financing. Combined with blockchain-based title and transaction records, the result could be a faster, more transparent and more trustworthy closing process, measured in days instead of weeks.” — Chris Hilliard, CEO at Winnow Solutions LLC
Do you know someone who’s pushing the boundaries of housing technology? Nominations for the 2025 HousingWire Tech Trendsetters are open now through Sept. 30, 2025. Click here to submit.
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