Hey folks, I’m a freelance voice-over artist and QA reviewer working on training content, usually things like workplace harassment and diversity courses. Recently, I was asked to QA a course on workplace harassment—and noticed the client had removed all references to gender, replacing it with sex. Anywhere the word “gender” appeared, it was just… gone or replaced.

It seems like a subtle thing on the surface, but it’s not. It completely shifts the tone and scope of the training. It feels like a quiet rollback of DEI principles, and honestly, it made my stomach turn. The kicker? I need this job. Turning this down could burn a bridge I can’t afford to lose.

I have a good relationship with the lead on the project (who’s just relaying instructions—they don’t have control over the content decisions), and I want to say something. At the same time, I’m scared that even a polite pushback could cost me.

Has anyone else been in this kind of situation? How do you draw the line when your ethics and survival are at odds? Would really appreciate your thoughts.

  • @deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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    164 days ago

    Take the job, and as part of doing a good job, you should point out, ONE TIME ONLY, that they’re using the incorrect word.

    Back this up with an “appeal to authority” citing a dictionary definition and a style guide from an expert on anti-harassment training.

    If they don’t accept your correction, drop it.

    That’s doing your job to the best of your ability while not hurting your own livelihood.