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FOSS Sexism Claims Met With Ire and Denial

Last Friday Bryce Byfield gave us a little insight into the fallout surrounding his article on sexism in the FOSS world. Unfortunately it seems that FOSS junkies did little better than the rest of the world with respect to sexism, displaying similar levels of denial, abuse, and ignorance. "But the real flood of emotion comes from the anti-feminists and the average men who would like to deny the importance of feminist issues in FOSS. Raise the subject of sexism, and you are met with illogic that I can only compare to that of the tobacco companies trying to deny the link between their products and cancer. Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible — being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community. I know that many women in the community have been attacked much more savagely than I have, so I'm not complaining. Nor am I a stranger to readers who disagree with me, but the depth of reaction has taken me back more than once. I think the reaction is an expression of denial more than anything else."

1,255 comments

  1. Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then this story should get buried pretty quickly on Slashdot!

    1. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If a woman programmed and became a geek because she really wanted to do it, and allowed neither the unpopularity of her choice nor anything that some online asshats have to say to dissuade her, then she'd be just like a man. If men needed a culture of approval and acceptance and someone to remind them whenever possible that they are wanted and welcome, and then and only then could they program if they wanted to, then they'd be just like women. This arrangement necessarily leads to the appearance of men doing whatever they want while women are excluded. I believe it's the women who need to change, to get a bit more backbone, and to realize that anyone who's ever done great things has caught a lot of flak for it. If they could do that in a graceful way instead of a bitchy way that only proves they are better at hassling someone than the sexists, very little would ever stop them. Otherwise they are just as strong and, when they do have that determination, just as able as men. I don't see this as a sexual difference, more like a mental image that is quite malleable.

    2. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good post.

    3. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Women should stay home, have babies, and please their husband!

    4. Re:Well if that's true... by ClosedSource · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "If men needed a culture of approval and acceptance and someone to remind them whenever possible that they are wanted and welcome"

      Isn't that why we have moderation on Slashdot? So that the culture can reward those who conform to it.

    5. Re:Well if that's true... by FlyingBishop · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If men needed a culture of approval and acceptance and someone to remind them whenever possible that they are wanted and welcome, and then and only then could they program if they wanted to, then they'd be just like women.

      Is this a troll (along with all the mods) or is the Slashdot community really that blind? What the fuck do you call Slashdot if not a massive male circle-jerk bonding party? In fact, the whole moderation system seems like this overindulgent 'female' system the AC is railing against.

    6. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, it's a perfect example of what the OP was talking about.

    7. Re:Well if that's true... by story645 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You make it seem so damn simple, like confidence is the key to everything. That actually works really great when you're working with guys on the more enlightened side of the scale, the respectful team workers everyone wants to work with. The assholes are the problem, 'cause as much as they don't listen to anyone, they'll ignore girls even more so. All the grace and confidence in the world doesn't work all the time, neither does being bitchy. Look, I think handing out special favors to girls based on gender is idiotic and I hate it as much as any guy does. What would be awesome is if guys in tech could treat the girls as they do any guy, but I haven't seen nearly enough of that.

      Men already have a culture of approval, as they're never the only guy in the room in science and tech. (The average upper level electrical-engineer course in my school has 3-5 girls for 30 guys.) Guys rarely go into female only fields like nursing or pre-school teaching for the same reasons girls don't do tech, so guys being tougher to social pressures is total bs. Even when guys do take female dominant classes like psychology, they often give macho excuses like they're doing it for the hot chicks.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    8. Re:Well if that's true... by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 0

      To expound on this: Women are typically more social, which lends itself more towards consuming technology, like Drupal as an example. I wouldn't be surprised to see lots of women generating templates and styles and things of that sort. If no one uses the output, it gets neglected in favor of something people use.

      Men just go build stuff, whether someone uses it or not. Social skills are a hindrance to working on code for 8 or 16 hours a day, just go away and let me code! Especially having to explain or defend your position, that's like a slap in the face. There's a reason men buy power tools and women knit sweaters.

      Naturally when the two different styles meet, there will be conflict. In person, it's easier to deal with. Online, especially from the man's view where replying takes time away from coding, the reply can be curt and misunderstood as an insult or condescension. Then you don't have the ability to take someone aside and clarify - followup is seen as nagging.

      (all based on stereotypes, I don't care if you're an exception)

    9. Re:Well if that's true... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Some might see it that way. Others, like AC, take advantage of the system by posting as AC when he doesn't feel like conforming. Others, like myself, post their thoughts with no regard to karma. Then, there are the karma whores who have studied what is rewarded on slashdot, and only post comments that are likely to be modded up.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    10. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think this almost entirely misses the point. Feminists say that the structure of society and individuals' prejudices make it more difficult for women to succeed in (e.g.) the workplace than men. Your response to that seems to be "Get used to it. You'll get a lot farther by growing a backbone than by bitching." This is only true in the short term, if its true at all. Tomorrow's women will be better off if we, today, address the prejudices than if today's women merely "grow a backbone.

      It's also pretty shocking that you think it's mere "bitching" for women to point out and attempt to address the systematic disadvantages that they face in the workplace. Does this mean that women should only "bitch" and not try to work despite their disadvantages? Of course not. But we as a society would never get anywhere if oppressed/disadvantaged groups were expected to just deal with it without protesting the inequality. Would you have said the same thing, "Quit bitching and grow a backbone" to slaves? Where would our society be today if we all thought like you?

      This is all to say nothing of your implicit premise that both men and women catch equal amounts of flak for taking up programming, which is, I think, obviously false.

    11. Re:Well if that's true... by SBrach · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Guys rarely go into female only fields like nursing or pre-school teaching for the same reasons girls don't do tech

      Except that 10% of nurses are now male, rising every year. On top of that 20% of current nursing students are male, again, rising every year.

      Is it really so hard to believe that more men find electrical engineering interesting and more women find psychology interesting? Do we really have to be the same to be equal? I hope not, that would be pretty boring.

    12. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Yes, women should be more like men who don't have to deal with sexism. Its their fault they have problems with the rejection that men never face. Why rail against the culture when its so much easier to blame the victims! Not only that, we should accuse women of being bitchy and unable to cope with the stresses men face. +5 Insightful!

      Fuck, I feel sorry for your ignorance.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    13. Re:Well if that's true... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      It's also pretty shocking that you think it's mere "bitching" for women to point out and attempt to address the systematic disadvantages that they face in the workplace.

      My take on the whole thing is that that group is just as biased and exclusionary as people are claiming that us engineers are. So, are you talking about feminists (who just want a fair shake) or the batshit crazy contingent that I ran into?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    14. Re:Well if that's true... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      "Quit bitching and grow a backbone" to slaves?

      Wow. Do you really think that is ANYTHING like what women experience? Are you fucking insane?

      My wife works in technology. Guess what... she has to play by the rules of the "boys club". It's an unfortunate side effect of how things work. She still enjoys it greatly, and banters with the guys because she just doesn't view herself as a victim of anything.

      Ever worked in the nursing industry? Or some other female-dominated industry? It's very different. Men end up letting a lot of shit slide in general that women don't. My point is that shit happens. We don't have a right to not be offended. If it really is a hostile environment, then yes, you should be protected. But your feelings? Cry me a fucking river, learn to deal with the real world where not everyone is entitled to be happy all the time.

    15. Re:Well if that's true... by lgw · · Score: 1

      Well, I work in software development, so there's almost no overlap with American culture. A significant percentage of Indian software developers are women, and all young Indian software developers I've asked (a growing sample) have gotten into the profession because "my parents chose it for me". Nothing to do with "geek culture" at all. While it's not close to 50-50 in my workplace yet, it's way past the stage where a female developer would be the only one in the room.

      And the assholes don't listen to anyone that's why they're assholes. Learn how to work office politics to your advantage: either everyone else hates the assholes too, and you can bypass them, or recognize the sign that it's time to move to a better workplace.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    16. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Well, I think it should be obvious that I agree that there is a vast difference in degree between the oppression of women and the oppression of slaves. But the GP's logic is equally applicable to both. That was the point.

    17. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Why would I be agreeing with batshit crazy people? ;)

      But, yes, I take your point. There are crazy feminists. I am intending to agree with the sane ones.

    18. Re:Well if that's true... by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Tomorrow's women will be better off if we, today, address the prejudices than if today's women merely "grow a backbone.

      He's saying it's all a self-fulfilling prophecy.

      Men get a lot of flak for being geeks and nerds too. It's almost tradition to portray the programming nerd as socially awkward, unkempt, usually fat, sometimes balding, but always physically inferior. Tell me that's not prejudice, that it's not flak.

      But men don't really bother to take notice of these things. When we want to do something, we do it. We don't ask for social acceptance. We don't look to our peers and wonder what they'd think of us, whether it's cool or hip or not.

      GP is saying, if women held the same attitudes, they'd go much farther in life than if they continue to cling to the idea that a male-dominated society is keeping them down. Because that doesn't exist by and large (sure, there are the outliers, but that's all they are nowadays). The only thing that matters now is money; how much you have, and how much you can make.

      And there have been studies concluding that a lack of self confidence directly causes poor performance.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    19. Re:Well if that's true... by quanticle · · Score: 1

      My question is, why is that perceived as a "problem"? Since when was it a natural law for every profession to have the same gender balance as society at large? As long as no one is coercing a person into choosing one path over another, what's the issue?

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    20. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...women [...] the systematic disadvantages that they face in the workplace.

      This is all to say nothing of your implicit premise that both men and women catch equal amounts of flak for taking up programming...

      I'm sensing another implicit premise here...

    21. Re:Well if that's true... by story645 · · Score: 1

      Except that 10% of nurses are now male, rising every year. On top of that 20% of current nursing students are male, again, rising every year.

      And female participation in the tech fields rise every year too. Especially when there are financial incentives, which is also the same reason why guys go into nursing and the like. Nursing being a growing field takes away the stigma associated with it. I don't really care what the gender distro is, but I just don't believe the reasoning behind women not going into engineering is 'cause they're not tough enough to stick it out, which is what the parent poster implied.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    22. Re:Well if that's true... by Goaway · · Score: 1

      And whaddya know, it's "+5 Insightful".

    23. Re:Well if that's true... by canadian_right · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When a woman does it, it is bitching. When a man does it, it is being assertive.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    24. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      There are certainly parts of this that I agree with. It's true that men are discouraged (at least in some ways) from becoming programmers. And, certainly, more self confidence helps one succeed.

      But when you say that sex discrimination (and other social factors) are not to blame and pin the responsibility solely on women's emotional frailty is where we part ways pretty drastically. This is a very widespread attitude that is itself a hinderence to greater equality between men and women in our society.

      Plenty of other commenters here have dug up instances of offensive conduct in the FOSS community and I don't think I need to repeat what they've said. And the response generally seems to have been much like yours: "it's just at the fringes." Maybe that's so, but imagine you're a women who is actually trying to be taken seriously by the community. Even if this is only fringe conduct, it's fringe conduct that women are systematically exposed to and that reinforces messages that they have likely been resisting their whole lives: that women aren't meant to be professionals, that women exist to please men, that women aren't to be taken seriously.

      Can a strong woman resist these messages? Of course. Would it be a good thing if every woman were this strong? Certainly. But the fact remains that this is a hurdle that does not exist for men. If we want women to be able to contribute equally, we should all be fighting these attitudes and not making apologies for them.

    25. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Exactly. ...or protesting, or being an activist, or sticking up for himself, or taking a stand...

    26. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Speaking as a male nursing student, a good deal of that is due to the encouragement of a culture of acceptance, with posters recruiting nurses showing males and that sort of shit. Despite all that, its an uphill battle and I often do get shit on for my choice to pursue nursing.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    27. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      She still enjoys it greatly, and banters with the guys because she just doesn't view herself as a victim of anything.

      Well that's great, and I'm happy for her. But you might want to think about all the other women who you are asking to bend their views of what it means to be respected in the workplace to conform with the frat boy behavior of what you call the "boys club." Maybe instead of focusing the debete on how women can learn to live with men's misbehavior, our efforts would be better spent telling the men responsible for this to not be such infants.

    28. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      India certainly has its own culture differences with regard to the tech field(caste being one). While F/OSS is global, I'm sure I'm not alone in saying I know enough about India's culture, and its repercussions in relation to the tech field, to know I don't know enough to talk about it without talking out of my ass.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    29. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Let me clarify with what I think you're trying to say, excuse me if I take liberties. Pretty much, it isn't about the people or groups of people. Its about our moral obligation to fight sexism, as well as being in our economic interest.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    30. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But men don't really bother to take notice of these things. When we want to do something, we do it. We don't ask for social acceptance. We don't look to our peers and wonder what they'd think of us, whether it's cool or hip or not.

      Yes, you do. Everyone does, years of psychological and sociological study show this. It is a prime reason why we're even able to form society. There are outliers of course, and people don't always follow groupthink. But you are seriously deluded if you think that you don't have a deep seated need for some type of social acceptance.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    31. Re:Well if that's true... by lgw · · Score: 1

      There's definitely some interplay between caste and the Indian software developement culture - it occasionally makes for office politics that are completely opaque to me! But being a software developer in India today is socially much like being a doctor was in America 30+ years ago - a ticket to the upper middle class, but an extremely competitive environment as a result.

      While there is still some genuine sexism (I've had to deal with it indirectly), it's counter-institutional. That is to say: people sometimes come in with an attitude of not wanting to work for a woman, or not taking female co-workers seriously, but companies agressively stop such BS (well, at least the companies I've worked for, I can't speak beyond that). And a much healthier percentage of Indian programmers are female, compared to American-born programmers (of course, my sample size for the latter over the past 5 years is vanishingly small), maybe 20%, and seemingly growing over time.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    32. Re:Well if that's true... by PitaBred · · Score: 3, Interesting
      See, that's the victim mentality. You want to be part of the crowd, but you don't want to do what they do. See how stupid it sounds when you say it that way? There's a big difference between saying "That's not cool" to the guys and getting all pissy and calling yourself a "feminist" and saying you're having your rights trampled on. You have no right to not be offended. If you don't want to speak up for your rights, stop interacting with other people.

      Realize that women have a very different social dynamic than men do. Hell, just read this. Choice quote:

      Because female brains tend to focus on and remember details longer, and because the oxytocin girls produce has the effect of causing them to care more about connections and relationships than boys, this can lead to the terrible trio of social conflict for girls: they notice it more, they remember it more and they care more!

      Did it ever occur to you that perhaps the women are feeling victimized, and reading a hell of a lot more into it than was actually intended, and that is at least partially their problem to deal with if they're going to work with a lot of men?

      What you're asking is for all men in a given field to change the way they think and behave because some women feel uncomfortable. Excuse me, but fuck you. I, and every man I know, try by and large to be decent people. Unfortunately, there is culture clash. The only way through that is to have BOTH SIDES compromise a bit. Getting pissy about every perceived slight is NOT a good way to win friends. Being a frat-boy isn't, either. But I see a hell of a lot more victims feeling entitled to be "treated with respect" due to someone not living up to their expectations than I do 'Bluto' Blutarsky's just being misogynist assholes.

    33. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if I agree with your formulation or not, but you're right that I could use to phrase my view more clearly, so here's a stab:

      I take it as a premise that there is a pattern of offensive conduct towards women in the FOSS community (or the workplace, etc.).

      But this is unacceptable for at least two reasons (and I think they're the ones you've picked out). An economic reason: it's good for everyone economically if women are able to participate more fully. And a moral reason: it's wrong to force women to choose between being routinely offended and working (this point has more force if we're talking about a conventional workplace than if we're talking about the FOSS community).

      This being the case, something has to give. Either men need to stop behaving offensively, or women need to stop being so easily offended.

      I'm finding that the latter is a popular suggestion here on /. and I wonder why that is. It seems to me that it's more reasonable to ask the people being immature to cut it out than to ask women to suck it up. (Again, for a few reasons: assignment of responsibility to track moral fault and assignment responsibility to the cheapest cost avoider come to mind)

      I also think a lot of people are taken in by a false dichotomy here. Women can (and should) do both; they can do their best to function in our society as it is while challenging its inequities.

    34. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Koombaya, motherfucker.

      No good deed goes unpunished. We don't live in a Utopia. We live in an unfair world, with unfair, foul and nasty people. I'm not particularly good at coping with it, myself, but there's definitely some semblance of truth to the GP's message. And to the OP.

    35. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, here is something we can agree on: a minority of men are responsible for most of the genuinely offensive conduct of men, and there is a minority of women who demand more deference to their sensibilities than they are owed. We can probably both agree that those groups people need to alter their behavior/expectations. Fair?

      The tricky part is dealing with the situations in the middle where both the men and women are behaving like reasonable men and reasonable women. But, nonetheless, the women are offended by the men.

      We have a choice here: we can tell the men to behave themselves, or we can tell the women to suck it up. I'm honestly floored by the fact that there is any question of which way to go in this case.

      You seem to think that the question is resolved by pointing out that nobody is forcing the women to participate. And there's something to this. And if we were talking about something like a private club then I think you would absolutely be right. But there are real external social reasons for a woman to get involved with a FOSS project (like employment obligations, wanting to hone her skills, giving back to a project); it's not just that women want to get involved. So the question as I see it is this: is it fair to make women choose between being offended and furthering their career/improving their skills/ etc. when the ONLY cost of avoiding the dilemma is to ask men to behave like gentlemen.

      (Btw, I'm a man. Not sure if that was clear.)

    36. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to re-read his post, or learn something about argumentation.

      He is asserting, without proof, that women and men experience the same external pressures when attempting success. He goes on to state that it is primarily their response to these difficulties that gives the aura of systematic disadvantages. The conclusion to his line of reasoning is that instead of bitching and expecting special treatment, women should "grow a backbone" similarly to men. In fact, if his premise is correct, then his conclusion is reasonable.

      In your post you are ignoring his premise, and attacking his conclusion. Well, if his premise is false then his conclusion does not really matter now does it? Why write a long-winded post about his conclusion as if it stands without his premise? This kind of stupid arguing leads to meaningless waste-of-time-conversations. Provide some evidence that men and women are experiencing disproportionate amounts of "flak" in the F/OSS community.

    37. Re:Well if that's true... by skarphace · · Score: 1

      It's also pretty shocking that you think it's mere "bitching" for women to point out and attempt to address the systematic disadvantages that they face in the workplace. Does this mean that women should only "bitch" and not try to work despite their disadvantages? Of course not. But we as a society would never get anywhere if oppressed/disadvantaged groups were expected to just deal with it without protesting the inequality. Would you have said the same thing, "Quit bitching and grow a backbone" to slaves? Where would our society be today if we all thought like you?

      Did you seriously just equate women in the workplace to slaves? Really? And as for women being disadvantaged, please provide examples. If anything, I've seen incompetent women in IT last much longer than competent men. But, that's all anecdotal, I'm sure you can bring some back at me, too. What I and many other men on this forum are basically saying is that we don't normally see these differences.

      This is all to say nothing of your implicit premise that both men and women catch equal amounts of flak for taking up programming, which is, I think, obviously false.

      We all take flak for being geeks. I would love to see more women in IT. I'd like to see more viewpoints and maybe just to be around more women in this field(I know, you probably consider that sexist). Of all the women I've met in IT, only one was truly worth her salt.

      I'm on the fence about this discussion, but I wish people would use a bit less hyperbole.

      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    38. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Did you seriously just equate women in the workplace to slaves?

      No, in fact I didn't. What I said was that the GP's argument would have worked just as well as a defense of slavery. Of course I agree that slavery is much worse than the situation of women today. There's no comparison.

      As for the evidence of discrimination, I'll leave you to look at some of the other posts for that but, there are quite a few. But you're exactly right that there isn't much we can accomplish by trading anecdotes, so all I'll say is this: it's important to remember that it doesn't take repeated, egregious cases of sexism to make a community hostile to women. A vocal fringe is all it takes.

      Of course I agree that most men in these communities are not sexist (at least not noticeably so). The problem, as I see it, is that there is a vocal, immature minority of FOSS men who are always making sexist jokes, talking about porn, and asking women out on dates on message boards when they try to make serious contributions. This is a problem, and its a shame so many here on /. want to respond by asking women to grow a backbone instead of asking that men not beheve like middle schoolers.

    39. Re:Well if that's true... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      As I'm sure you've figured out, if you're in such an environment, the only way to deal with this is to realize that the people who will legitimately give you shit (as opposed to teasing you in a friendly manner) are people who just aren't worth caring about. I mean, yes. There are assholes in the world. You may have no choice but to work for/with some of these losers, but they're obviously losers, and so their opinions have no value. You can't let your sense of self-worth be tied to the opinion of people who are themselves worthless.

    40. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if you replaced the work woman with geek and the word man with jock, and the appropriate sports metaphors (all male pronouns):

      If a [nerd] [played sports] and became [sporty] because he really wanted to do it, and allowed neither the unpopularity of his choice nor anything that some online asshats have to say to dissuade him, then he'd be just like a [jock]. If [jocks] needed a culture of approval and acceptance and someone to remind them whenever possible that they are wanted and welcome, and then and only then could they [play] if they wanted to, then they'd be just like [nerds]. This arrangement necessarily leads to the appearance of [jocks] doing whatever they want while [nerds] are excluded. I believe it's the [nerds] who need to change, to get a bit more backbone, and to realize that anyone who's ever done great things has caught a lot of flak for it. If they could do that in a graceful way instead of a [whiny] way that only proves they are better at hassling someone than the [athleticists], very little would ever stop them. Otherwise they are just as strong and, when they do have that determination, just as able as [jocks]. I don't see this as a [athletic] difference, more like a mental image that is quite malleable.

      Take a look at your assumptions.

    41. Re:Well if that's true... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Folk wisdom wise, you're right. But in a broader sense, you can't really ignore social pressures. You can pretend to ignore them, but you're doing yourself a disservice if you think you're not affected by them.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    42. Re:Well if that's true... by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      How do you know that a man would not let the unpopularity of his choice or what some online asshats say dissuade him from doing what he wanted? If men really had that much backbone, male nurses wouldn't be so uncommon.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    43. Re:Well if that's true... by Norsefire · · Score: 1

      If you want your cause to be taken seriously, focus on serious issues. Complaining because people use the phrase "So simple your grandmother could do it" is liable to make people roll their eyes and ignore everything else you have to say.

    44. Re:Well if that's true... by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      My dad says I was the only 14 year old girl he'd ever met to ask for a power drill for Christmas.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    45. Re:Well if that's true... by jaywhy · · Score: 1

      People contribute to open source projects for a complex web of reasons, they may love the challenge or the joy of programming in itself, but high on that list of reasons is the sense of accomplishment and approval people require as social beings from their peers. It is a denial of human nature, our essence as social animals, to say men or women don't or shouldn't need this cultural approval.

      If males weren’t accepted as themselves in the FOSS they’d move on. Why should women be any different?

    46. Re:Well if that's true... by BorgCopyeditor · · Score: 1

      If men needed a culture of approval and acceptance and someone to remind them whenever possible that they are wanted and welcome, and then and only then could they program if they wanted to, then they'd be just like women.

      Whether men do need a culture of approval we'll never know, because they get that approval frequently...from other men.

      --
      Shop as usual. And avoid panic buying.
    47. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When a women does it, it is called being assertive. When a man does it, it is called being aggressive.

    48. Re:Well if that's true... by asaz989 · · Score: 1

      Except that (guess what?) when men are the ones who are outside of the "culture of approval and acceptance," they have just the same problems. (cf. racism, homophobia, etc., and the very substantial effect they have/had of driving the affected people out of certain fields even without any legal or formal discrimination.) The problem here isn't that women have a need for approval and acceptance - that's a characteristic of the vast majority of humanity. We might not all get that from our workplace or the online environment, but it needs to come from somewhere.

    49. Re:Well if that's true... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I hate it when a debate on equality of the sexes comes down to "stop moaning and compete with men by being more like them".

      Somehow this seems to have become the accepted way for women to get on in their careers, and life in general. Be more like a man, speak more like a man, get some "attitude" like a man.

      What we need is feminism. Feminism is about women being considered as equally valuable as men are, but based on their feminine qualities. Maybe it seems a bit counter-intuitive to judge women differently when they want equality, but it's actually just a simple acceptance that there are differences between the sexes. Two things can be different but of equal value in different ways.

      Women are naturally social animals. If you look at the usage stats for social networking sites and non-violent MMORPGs you will find that at least 50%, usually more, of the users are women. It makes sense to employ women to help build and improve those systems, be it with design or coding skills.

      Of course, either gender is capable of doing that sort of thing, but for some reason there are still more men than women doing it. If you accept that women are just as interested in these areas of IT then it seems reasonable to investigate why that is. Women have been telling us the answer for years - they find it hard to get on because of the way men treat them in IT. There are other factors, but prejudice is no trivial matter.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    50. Re:Well if that's true... by Upphew · · Score: 1

      This being the case, something has to give. Either men need to stop behaving offensively, or women need to stop being so easily offended.

      I'm finding that the latter is a popular suggestion here on /. and I wonder why that is. It seems to me that it's more reasonable to ask the people being immature to cut it out than to ask women to suck it up. (Again, for a few reasons: assignment of responsibility to track moral fault and assignment responsibility to the cheapest cost avoider come to mind)

      I also think a lot of people are taken in by a false dichotomy here. Women can (and should) do both; they can do their best to function in our society as it is while challenging its inequities.

      No need to wonder: men don't want to grow up, we want to be immature some times, at least I want to. Take away all the fun and games and dirty jokes and you get very dull experience for a male used to that, especially if the work/hobby is the last place where he can have fun. Also men are more competitive (or are we?) and part of that is downplaying of others, maybe with not so nice words.

      Of course there are real chauvinists everywhere and competitiveness and immaturity can be overdone, but in my experience generally women are more sensitive to that. Calling me dickhead nets you finger and FU, but try calling female dickhead and see what happens.

    51. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and this is a problem because you don't agree with the opinion of... what... anyone other than yourself?

      Something about that original post keeps knocking.

    52. Re:Well if that's true... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      No need to wonder: men don't want to grow up, we want to be immature some times

      Well, right. I meant to be asking a rhetorical question. As a man I agree that it's a lot of fun to be an immature asshole. But I don't think it's reasonable to ask women to change to accomodate our desire to behave like imbeciles.

    53. Re:Well if that's true... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      If in "feminism" you ask for men to change, you seem to want your cake and eat it, too. You don't want women to have to change, you want men to change so women feel more at home. Which is bullshit, and is not feminism. Feminism is empowering women to deal with adversity. It's not trying to make everyone else play nice because their poor widdle feewings might get hurt. Women tell us they don't get into IT because of the way they're treated... and people say they don't want to pay any taxes, either. But they sure as shit wouldn't want to pay for roads and other services directly. There are a number of women who get along fine in IT. They're treated with respect IF THEY SHOW THE SKILLS. IT is almost always a meritocracy, internally at least. If you can't compete and add value, you get made fun of or ignored. Happens to guys, too. That's not sexism, that's just how geeks work. Only difference is that it seems a couple women want to bitch about "equality" when that's exactly what is happening.

    54. Re:Well if that's true... by Demonspawn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What a lot of people in the whole "it's sexism" camp forget is that there are only two types of people:

      Those who are sexist
      Those who are idiots.

      See, the whole problem with "reducing sexism" means that you have to be an idiot. There is no definition of sexism that allows for someone to be a non-idiot and not be sexist at the same time.

      See, to be non-sexist we have to do one of two things:
      1. Ignore that there are difference between men and women:
      Wow, I guess men do get pregnant!!

      2. We can recognize that there are differences, but we must willfully ignore them.
      Well if I want kids I'll have just as much luck sleeping with Tom as I would with Betty.

      These two are "no-duh" examples, but that's the point. Either you are sexist, or you are an idiot.

      Really, I mean, comon! The whole "sexism" debate is all about saying men and women are interchangeable, which is patently false. Men and women are different, **ON A BIOLOGICAL LEVEL**, and the sooner Feminists realize this then they can stop trying to solve a "problem" which can't be solved.

    55. Re:Well if that's true... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "What would be awesome is if guys in tech could treat the girls as they do any guy, but I haven't seen nearly enough of that."

      Trouble is, if you do that...the guy is likely to get a harrassment suit slapped on him.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    56. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For what it's worth, I spent some time as a patient in an understaffed hospital and would have been over the moon to have more nurses of either gender. I hit it off pretty well with the only male nurse there at the time and he told me the best advice he'd received for getting through the day: if people start giving you shit for being a male nurse, start having trouble finding a vein. ;)

    57. Re:Well if that's true... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      You are in denial about the way women are treated. It used to be a lot more obvious back in the 60s and 70s. Until the wars a woman's place was in the home. Go back far enough and women were not even allowed to vote.

      Here's a true story. Back in the early 80s when women started to enter the Metropolitan Police's special divisions, it was common practice to stamp their arse with "Property of the Metropolitan Police". There were certainly some "initiation rights" for men too, but nothing so humiliating. Now, tell me how that sort of thing was a product of women not being assertive enough or not having the skills required of the job. It had nothing to do with that, and everything to do with the 99% male staff trying to assert their dominance.

      I suppose you will try to argue that it was women's fault for not refusing to allow that sort of thing, but that doesn't justify it. Back in the real world we just call it bullying. Furthermore, why should a woman have to be that "tough"? Why can't men just accept working along side them and appreciate them for their skills and abilities, even if they are different from their own.

      Things are much better now of course, but there are still problems. I think the US and to a large degree the UK are particularly bad, because we have treat everything as competition and are constantly looking out for ourselves. The Apprentice was an interesting example of that - there was no way a team could win, only an individual, so even when people were supposed to be working together they were simultaneously trying to better each other and protect themselves against the fallout if the team didn't win the challenge.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    58. Re:Well if that's true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it was. No girls on the internet.

    59. Re:Well if that's true... by jcr · · Score: 1

      If I ever have a kid, I hope she's like you.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    60. Re:Well if that's true... by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Awww thanks! :)

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    61. Re:Well if that's true... by WNight · · Score: 1

      Some people are just rude jerks, but be they slashdot trolls, real-life coworkers, or customers, or someone else whose views you find repugnant, sometimes all you can do is walk away.

      FOSS has the perfect ways to do that, unlike your day job where you'll be fired if you cause a scene, you can tell some jerk off. You can also remain anonymous and simply be judged on merit alone. Discussion on IRC and such always has a way to ignore people...

      These frat boys you want to simply stop being crude are in fact other people whose lives just focus on sex acts more than you find tasteful. Should we truly ask them to change, or censor themselves so you aren't offended, or should you learn to let live?

      It's not that you should have to work with someone who annoys you, and in a job you could probably get reassigned simply for not liking them, but you shouldn't have the right to demand that they simply change just because you find them offensive.

      No, we aren't missing the point though by just saying "grow a thick skin". It's not a blame the victim mentality. It's a recognition that even if you rubber-padded all the walls you could find you've merely confined yourself to a comfortable prison. The real world is outside - not everyone in it is nice. In some places, people will try to kill you. To go out unsuspecting and pampered is truly dangerous.

      By padding the FOSS world and calling out any sexists we merely file one corner off a sharp world and do nothing to help. Any projects not yet brought into the light of appropriate behavior will still be inaccessible. But by armoring the participants, female and male, black and white, we let them go anywhere and tell off their own sexist/racist jerks.

    62. Re:Well if that's true... by jcr · · Score: 1

      Tell your dad some random dude on /. knows how lucky he is. ;-)

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  2. No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Raise the subject of sexism ...

    What reports of sexism have there been? Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women? It takes a very special kind of person to do FOSS development -- because it's often outside of work. Which means you have to love what you do at work and then come home and do it some more. Even I get sick of coding. It's an uncommon desire and requires a special kind of insanity. So much of the stuff I write outside of work is just absolutely useless in the end. Is it possible this trait is far less common in women than men?

    Present evidence of sexist attitudes and attacks and I will gladly support you. Hell, I support you right now, nothing would make me happier than more women in FOSS. I just am not sure how you promote that sort of goal -- usually it's a monetary or favorable employment reward for having ovaries but the only reward is ... recognition?

    Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible — being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

    People on the internet called you names? It happens. Who are these people? Probably random pigs the internet has no shortage of. Don't let it get to you, hold your summit and figure out a way to designate Female FOSS Developer of the Month on your website.

    To reiterate, I'm not denying that there is an disturbingly low percentage of women in FOSS development. I'm just questioning what's causing that. It's probably a number of factors including Hollywood not showing women as the computer hacker in many of their movies (except maybe Hackers). It's predominantly the stereotypical male. Women have to overcome that and women have to realize that getting together and working on a project with your friends by just coding can be fun. But I think society tells them early on that's not what women do. If there's any sexism, I've seen no proof it's internal to FOSS.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People on the internet called you names? It happens. Who are these people?

      Have you ever seen a good OpenBSD flamewar?

      Theo de Raadt has an absolute, uncompromising stand on open source, and refuses to deal with crappy, binary-only drivers. He often calls out people & products he thinks are crap. Gender never comes in to the discussion.

    2. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To paraphrase: keep that political bullshit out of here. Code. Or don't.

    3. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by roscivs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's also a big difference between "no better than the rest of the world" and "correlation between FOSS and sexism". The first I can certainly believe--there's no reason to believe that the FOSS community is any less sexist than the rest of the world. You're going to find a lot of sexist individuals just because that's the status quo in society today.

      But there's no reason to harp on FOSS developers in particular unless there's evidence that the FOSS community is more sexist than the rest of the world (which I, at least, haven't seen). If that evidence isn't there, then keep on fighting the good fight against sexist pigs in general, wherever you find them.

      --
      ~ roscivs
    4. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by TheKidWho · · Score: 3, Funny

      What if they're really good binary only drivers?

    5. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It takes a very special kind of person to do FOSS development..."

      Special indeed! I'm thinking of the movie "Rain Man"...

    6. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      That's a pretty good starting point.

      I've seen first-hand how women in IT are treated, and I saw the worst of objectification and discrimination. A woman entering an IT department has to be twice as good just to be considered a peer, and them she has to deal with a bunch of immature, socially-retarded little boys. If they don't show interest in dating one of these sticky, overweight odor-bombs, she's called a lesbian.

      I'd like to see affirmative action in IT departments, if only to get the rest of the staff to start taking regular showers.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    7. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, I support you right now, nothing would make me happier than more women in FOSS.

      Shenanigans!

      (hyperbole)

    8. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Informative · · Score: 1
      Maybe it's because women are too practical, or have better things to do, than to code for free, as suggested by this comment on TFA:

      Elizabeth
      It's unfortunate that you're getting beat up over this. While I have not participated much in FOSS aside from using it, I do work for a tech giant,...

      So maybe this blogger should mind his own business.

    9. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by PriceIke · · Score: 1

      It's probably a number of factors including Hollywood not showing women as the computer hacker in many of their movies (except maybe Hackers)

      orly?

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    10. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What causes it? Skewed studies.

      The 1.5% is based on a 2002 study about "Skills learned in FLOSS" of 361 respondents(of which 6 were female, so more like 1.66%), consisting mostly(43%) of software engineers with a mean of 8.7 years experience/4 years std dev. There were more managers(10%) than plain old programmers(9%).

      Designers, documentation, usability, and areas that might have an increased likelihood of female respondants came in at less than 3%, and hardware/embedded types(of which there are a lot of female developers these days, eg LadyAda or Leah Buechley) didn't even get a category.

      The study failed to obtain a sample of F/LOSS as whole.

    11. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by smartr · · Score: 1

      While I'm not saying there isn't an issue with sexism in software development in general...
      I wonder if the difference between employer paid development and independent development is what we are seeing here. It's likely employed developers are much less likely to contribute to open source. It may be that employers have incentive to hire women over equally qualified men in the name of diversity. This would only exasperate the general lack of women in the industry. Google seems to be saying universities have a 9:1 ratio of men to women in computer science. If proprietary software development is able to achieve a 4:1 ratio, wouldn't this mean that they actually have an abnormally large number of women developing for them compared to what the education system is producing?

    12. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by bitemykarma · · Score: 0

      Unbelievably, people are actually commenting on the Marge Simpson Poses For Playboy thread, so maybe there's something to this.

    13. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by prockcore · · Score: 1

      What reports of sexism have there been?

      Two that come to mind are

      The Flashbelt Conference

      and

      The Golden Gate Ruby Conference

      Both of which had pretty tasteless presentations.

    14. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      Have you ever seen a good OpenBSD flamewar?

      Umm ... no?

    15. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      People on the internet called you names? It happens. Who are these people? Probably random pigs the internet has no shortage of.

      This. The word "Vocal Minority" comes to mind.

      I was asked to comment on this issue, and I think I delivered a calm, measured response -- certainly not "denial". (Look for "Locker-Room Culture.")

      I think we can do better, but I think someone is taking the trolls too seriously. If big names like Linus, RMS, or Mark Shuttleworth are involved, that might say something -- and both RMS and Shuttleworth have said some things that could be considered sexist, which is probably what the original article was about.

      But if it's random Anonymous Cowards, welcome to the Internet. Have a look around bash.org, 4chan, or even Slashdot at -1 -- this is neither new nor specifically attacking women.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    16. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by trapnest · · Score: 0

      But that's morally wrong!
      It's like killing puppies.

    17. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mate if you want a layer of middle management micro managing every minute of your day and making inane comments about how things can be "nicer" an don't think it will take long before they want paying as well by all means encourage more women to become involved in open source just don't expect to much actual coding or work after all that's the mans job.
      Then you to can join the living hell which is trying to accomplish anything constructive once the ladies are on board and have enough numbers to form a power block.
      I speak from personal experience here as our once successful company is slowly dragged down the shitter
      Fuck feminism

    18. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by TaggartAleslayer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've worked in software development for the past 11 years. I've never seen the atmosphere you describe. Then again, I generally work for well established and reputable organizations.

      Generalizing IT workers as sweaty, bloated, smelly, sexist, uncouth, unethical, rejects is rather insulting to those of us which take our profession seriously.

      I'm sure there are some of the sorts like you describe out there, but they of a dying breed. In the last several businesses I've worked for I have reported to women in the capacity of VP, Director, or direct manager. Not just because they needed to fill a slot, but because they had the experience and skill-set to fill the role.

      I can promise you that had the culture had any of the lame stereotypes associated with it that you noted, it would have been sorted out in short order. Not just because of a crumbling greasy IT worker coalition, or whatever you are trying to get at, but because it is a ridiculous situation that doesn't actually happen outside of whatever low rent organization you had the unfortunate misery to work for.

    19. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I once had a cat name Theo and she was a big complainer too.

    20. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by TheNarrator · · Score: 1

      Sounds like someone is trying to introduce the "Culture War" Anti-Pattern into the FOSS Community:
      Read more here: http://www.hoover.org/publications/policyreview/3484376.html
      (FYI, this is not a perfect article, and explains things in terms of contemporary American politics, not the FOSS community, but does give a good description of the anti-pattern nonetheless.)

    21. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Oxymoron?

      (And yes, I use the Nvidia binaries and appreciate them. I just can't imagine that they couldn't be much better.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    22. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by ChrisUK · · Score: 1

      There have been many reports of sexism recently; see http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Timeline_of_incidents for an attempt at listing some of them.

      The most obvious example to me is the fact that death threats are being e-mailed to female FOSS contributors -- see http://geekfeminism.org/2009/10/08/psa-mikeeusas-hate-speech-and-harassment/

      This isn't anything new; it's been happening since 2005. I hope you'll agree that it's totally horrifically unacceptable, and understandable that women would go and find somewhere less hostile to them to spend their time after receiving these. Yet, apparently you didn't know about it: please consider becoming more informed about these issues before having such a strong opinion of denial that there's a problem.

    23. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      It's worse than that. Did you know there's only 0.0000001% of men that carry human fetuses? Talk about sexism writ large. The job of carrying human fetuses should be equal, but women have had a near-total lock on this job since time immemorial. It's shameful.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    24. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >>>Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      It's worse than that. Did you know there's only 0.0000001% of men that carry human fetuses? Talk about sexism writ large. The job of carrying human fetuses should be equal, but women have had a near-total lock on this job since time immemorial. It's shameful.

      But seriously -

      Sometimes I think people see sexism where none exist. I certainly have no prejudice against women working in engineering, and would welcome the sight of something other than hairy men, but that's just not the case. Besides this isn't the only field with gender inequity. Visit a college sometime and look inside their "health and human development" classes - all women. But nobody complains about sexism in HHD - they just accept the fact few men are interested in that field. The same is true in engineering.

      That's life not sexism, just the same way men can't give birth which is also not sexism.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    25. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      ...figure out a way to designate Female FOSS Developer of the Month on your website. As long as there's a centerfold spread, I'm in!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    26. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by penguin_dance · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. I actually read BOTH articles and there were no real examples, except the mention of some alleged sexist remarks at a keynote speech...which I didn't read and therefore won't comment on. It's like they're equivocating a low percentage of women in FOSS = sexism vs. just a general lack of interest. It may be that women programmers would rather get paid or can't afford...or have the time to make ongoing contributions to open source. Correlation is not causation.

      Or, if you prefer, listen to the horror stories female developers tell about sexist remarks or being asked out for dates. Look at the constant trolls on the mailing lists for female developers.

      Okay, yes there are always trolls anywhere...but is being asked on a date that bad? I mean at least you have something in common. And if the lead developer is smart he'll smack down the trolls or stalkers because it's stupid to lose a programmer who's willing to work for free and contribute.

      --
      If you've never been modded as "flamebait" or "troll," you've never tried to argue a minority viewpoint here!
    27. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hollywood not showing women as the computer hacker in many of their movies (except maybe Hackers)

      Angelina Jolie from The Net, the girl from Jurassic Park, Chloe from 24, Chloe from Smallville, Rachel from Alias, Trinity from The Matrix, Natalya Simonova in GoldenEye, Michelle Monaghan from Mr. Mrs. Smith...

      And the whole point of the article is that while programming and other computing careers are about 1/3 female, FOSS contributors are about 1-2% female. It's not the computers or the technology that girls are afraid of, it's FOSS, and the community surrounding it that drives them away. The Slashdot community, as a microcosm of the FOSS world, exemplifies the sexism inherent in the culture. Every time a girl makes it known that she is a female, there is an inevitable flood of "Hurr Hurr Hurr, a girl on Slashdot?" or "Pics or GTFO" type posts. The constant references to Slashdotters being virgins would be considered sexual harassment in a business environment, and not just to those being called virgins. While some may say that's just the nature of trolls, most males do not have to go through the same hazing ritual to become a part of the Slashdot community. Common comments like "Oh, just grow a pair" which, even when used between males, belie the sexist attitudes of the speaker. So, yes, a vocal portion of the FOSS community is quite sexist, and the majority of those who are not sexist simply step aside if not outright laugh when this juvenile behavior belittles a woman.

      Oh, and rushing in to publicly save the day when a woman is being harassed also exhibits sexist machismo if the woman doesn't actually want help, but unfortunately this sort of thing is quite difficult to ascertain in a principally text based communication medium. Just like in an office environment, these issues are best dealt with on a private basis. And if the libertarian tenets of the FOSS culture do not allow for any reasonable lasting discipline for such antisocial behavior, then FOSS will not expand any further than a handful of backstabbing outcasts following a couple of moderately well spoken leaders. The world will pass them by and begrudgingly thank them for the couple pieces of software that have actually proved useful.

    28. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by rxan · · Score: 1

      Don't forget satellite guidance programmer Natalya Simonova in James Bond Golden Eye. Damn. Boris was NOT invincible.

    29. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the reasons are mostly to do with psychodrama, projecting the internal world of the past, especially childhood, onto present-day issues.

      I think that most men involved in FOSS tend be nerdier/geekier/dorkier/whatever than non-FOSS men (including myself), and that they have mother-enmeshment issues. Associating with females is subconsciously betraying their mothers.

      http://www.amazon.com/When-Hes-Married-Mom-Mother-Enmeshed/dp/0743291387/

      Of course, this is probably going to sit at zero, since denial is such a huge problem, even though it's way more on-target than even the source article itself.

    30. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by HanzoSpam · · Score: 1

      Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible -- being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

      That's not bad for a start - maybe we could do "burned at the stake" for an encore?

      --

      Progressivism: Parasites helping parasites to help themselves - to other people's stuff.
    31. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ninfo (I have it as an alias for info).

    32. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by martyros · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What reports of sexism have there been?

      Uum, have you ever talked about this subject with a woman in computers or engineering? If you had, you wouldn't be asking this question. I really think this attitude is part of the problem. The first thing I did when someone mentioned sexism in FOSS was to look into it. Why *are* there so few women in CS departments, and fewer yet in FOSS projects? If you do, you can easily find lots of answers. Start by browsing this bibliography, maybe ask some women in IT or engineering you know.

      The biggest problem, AFAICT, is that it's so easy for people of any majority group (white / black / men / women) to unintentionally act in ways towards a minority group that make it really tough for them. It's tough to be a man in social work, it's tough to be a white guy in an all-black school, it's tough to be a skinny geek in a room full of beefy jocks, it's tough to be a woman in FOSS development. That means that any majority group needs to make an extra effort to counteract that. That's why we're talking to you about FOSS, instead of about men in social work. You're in a position to do something about this problem.

      The fact that group discrimination happens elsewhere is irrelevant. The fact is that it's hard for women in FOSS, which means that there aren't very many, which means that FOSS loses out big-time. If nothing else, a large demographic highly talented and capable people who could be contributing to FOSS are not because of irrelevant reasons. Furthermore, I believe that men and women are different in more than just their bodies, and that the difference is valuable. FOSS loses a lot more by having almost no women than they would by having almost no blue-eyed individuals.

      So instead of being reactive and saying, "Prove that it's really sexism", why don't you actively look for ways in which you or people around you may be unintentionally contributing to the problem? As others have said, it's only a tiny minority that are overtly sexist; the majority only do things unintentionally. But the effect is still there, and it's real.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    33. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget "It's a UNIX system! I know this!"

    34. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I used to say this, but the answer is that everybody knows those classes don't lead to "good" jobs. That's what feminists told me, and I have to say I agree.

      It's going to be a big concern when women begin to outnumber men in "good" fields though. I think it's already happening with medical schools but I may be misremembering.

    35. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by DuckDuckBOOM! · · Score: 1

      It's worse than that. Did you know there's only 0.0000001% of men that carry human fetuses?

      ...[punching keys]...let's see, 6.95 billion, times point zero zero zero.....holy crap! Almost 700 pregnant men are pregnant right now!? Why haven't I seen this on Oprah??

      --
      Life is like surrealism: if you have to have it explained to you, you can't afford it.
    36. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Could be a variety of reasons, but I doubt its some inherent difference between men and women. Might have to do with society as a hole with women as anchors to the family and thus when they leave this role they're expected to get paid. Even still, some of the big name outliers made in response to the parents post show an attitude that may be shared by the whole. Its worth investigation if nothing else.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    37. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      > nobody complains about sexism in HHD - they just accept the fact few men are interested in that field.

      Have you had a look at the salaries in those fields dominated by women? The reason, why people tend to complain about sexism on male dominated fields is because it means severe financial
      disadvantages.
      That no one complains about it, doesn't mean that no one consider it sexism. The fact is, it is. Men choosing to such fields are likely to be ridiculed, and how is that not sexism. But no one complains, because they will likely tend to work as sub-par engineers, earning more than the average visitor of HHD.

      > That's life not sexism, just the same way men can't give birth which is also not sexism.

      The same way women can't choose their husband, do business, or do vote, drive a car, fight in a war, go to university, study math and science, and finally engineering.
      Do you see any tendency?

      All of the above have been claimed to be "naturally" a male domain, while in truth it only has been one traditionally.

      Biology can certainly explain, why men can't give birth. But you will most certainly fail utterly to find any scientific reason, why women should not perform comparable to men in engineering.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    38. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      My experience at several companies (ranging from 7 people to 70000) is explicitly the opposite of that you portray.

      Women don't have a higher barrier of entry - indeed, the only difference in approach I've seen are the numerous "Women in IT" type forums set up to help them network. Where are the "Men in IT" forums?

      Once in the team women are expected to be competent, but are respected for the full range of skills they bring to bear. I've known female DBAs and sysadmins that know their stuff and are respected for it, I've known female programmers that lead a team because they're the best developer on it, and I've known female programmers that aren't the best at churning code but excel at other aspects of software engineering and thus boost the team anyway.

      That said most women tend to gravitate towards project management or business analysis roles. It's strange, but I've never heard anybody bitch about the prevalence of female BAs - it's almost a surprise these days when a BA is a man.

      I also haven't heard any of them being accused of being a lesbian. Except the one with a girlfriend, and even then it was less of an accusation than an acknowledgement.

      Incidentally, the men I've worked with have on occasion been immature, or socially retarded, but seldom both at the same time and never while being little boys. Indeed, the worst excesses involve alcohol, and I've seen the women in the team behaving every bit as badly under the influence as the men.

      I suggest you find a better workplace - sounds like the women already made that decision.

    39. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Interoperable · · Score: 1

      >Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      I think it's very clear in the article that the author is basing his claims on the fact that his colleagues have been discriminated against and the reaction to his defense of a feminist viewpoint.

      >If there's any sexism, I've seen no proof it's internal to FOSS.

      Factors that are external to FOSS may be the predominant reason why there are few female developers but the fact that women who are developers feel unwelcome in FOSS communities is very much internal. Likely you've never seen any instances of it because you're not a woman (I'm blindly assuming that from the tone of your post).

      Recognizing that female developers are often treated differently is critical to maintaining an open community for everyone, which is something that people interested in FOSS should have a great deal of respect for. Developers shouldn't feel that acknowledging discrimination is a personal attack against them and become defensive. They should strive to openly acknowledge problems and make every attempt to create an open community; anything less should be regarded as beneath the ideals that drive FOSS development in the first place.

      For the sake of openness I should point out that I'm not a woman or a developer but I'm writing based on what I read in the article and what I've seen in my own discipline. Outright discrimination is uncommon but an overly defensive position that it could never happen is common and is almost as bad.

      --
      So if this is the future...where's my jet pack?
    40. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I used to say this, but the answer is that everybody knows those classes don't lead to "good" jobs. That's what feminists told me, and I have to say I agree.

      It's going to be a big concern when women begin to outnumber men in "good" fields though. I think it's already happening with medical schools but I may be misremembering.

      That's exactly correct. Nobody cares about gender disparity in bad jobs. In well-paying high-demand jobs like nursing, the under-representation of men is seen as a serious issue and steps are being taken to address it.

      One interesting thing is that people trying to address the lack of men in nursing find that there's a preconception that nursing is "women's work" and that a male nurse is "unmanly". It's a holdover from when all the doctors were men, and beside them stood their subservient female nurse. On-job discrimination mostly comes from male doctors. So here's a nice mirroring: men don't go into nursing because their peers think it's beneath them, while women don't go into IT because their peers think it's above them.

      Notice how the GP says that the sexism is all imagined, but that the main reason he wants women to become better represented is to improve the scenery. Nice. Me, I want women to feel more comfortable taking computer related jobs because we're obviously missing out on a lot of talent by discriminating. But as every slashdot thread on this topic unintentionally proves, we have a long, long way to go.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    41. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Shirloki · · Score: 1

      If there's any sexism, I've seen no proof it's internal to FOSS.

      Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      Yes, as opposed to 28% in proprietary software (http://www.openwebvancouver.ca/sites/default/files/byron-women_in_open_source.pdf, p. 14-17). If it were as simple as "this trait [of willingness to do significant unpaid work] is far less common in women than men," then you'd expect that no volunteer organization to have a significant population of female members. But peace corps volunteers are 60% female (http://www.peacecorps.gov/wws/enewsletter/archives/may09.html).

      I'm inclined to agree with you that women are not attracted to programming in general because of social factors external to the programming world, but there are definitely internal factors as well. (As evidence, I cite the fact of active research in the field of physics education toward understanding why women initially do well in introductory courses, but progressively drop off in higher-level courses. Mind you, this research is done by real physicists.) Most technical fields suffer from this. Non-commercial programming doesn't require a different level of competence than commercial programming; free software approaches problems of similar difficulty and scale as non-free software, therefore a difference between men and women (if one exists!) in interest or competence doesn't account for the large difference in female participation. I'd bet money that there are numerous causes which the FOSS community will need lots of time to sort out and repair, but they're not all invisible.

      Bruce Byfield touches on part of the problem (http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/osrc/article.php/12068_3838186_2/Sexism-Open-Source-Softwares-Dirty-Little-Secret.htm): When an incident occurs where a joke unintentionally offends, the person who made the joke inevitably says something to the effect of "it was just a joke, chill out." This only serves to alienate women (and other offended groups), rather than re-gain their confidence. This applies in the cases of all mistakes, particularly on the part of leadership, which affect others. A failure to acknowledge the error will only persuade people to leave the community.

      Defending the mistake is the wrong thing to do, and will only make the offended people more angry because most human beings do not like having their feelings and opinions ignored (I offer a lifetime warranty on this technique for alienating people). The excuse, "it was just a joke," essentially invalidates the opinion of the offended people, whether or not the defendant intends (you might notice that people who make excuses excessively have few to no friends). The correct thing to do is actually apologize. To understand this process the apologetic party must make an attempt to stand in the other party's shoes, then coherently address their concerns. To effectively show concern for the complainant, the person apologizing must be brave about it and never mount a defense. The process follows:

      1) Do NOT defend actions. Do NOT put the burden on the other party; specifically, use active first person verbs ("I made...", "I will...", etc.), and do not use the passive voice ("I was misunderstood...") as it contains an implicit "by [someone]," effectively deflecting responsibility.

      2) Acknowledge the other person's feelings. (Examples: Formal; "I understand that you are uncomfortable with something I [said/did]." Less Formal; "I get that you're pissed at me.")

      3) Acknowledge responsibility. (Formal; "This arose from [an action I took/a statement I made]." Less Formal; "I messed up.")

      4) Cite specific failure. (Formal; "I did not foresee the [negative outcome(s)/implicit message(s)] which I [caused/expounded]." Less formal; "I didn't know [it] was meaningful to you.")

      5a) If a lesson was learned state the lesson. (Formal; "In the future I will be more aware of the impact my [w

    42. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by panthrkub · · Score: 1

      If there's any sexism, I've seen no proof it's internal to FOSS.

      Agreed. I've never had any of my contributions denied simply because I am a woman. I had absolutely no problem getting a job either (in the FOSS community, no less!). And I've certainly never been 'attacked'. I keep reading and re-reading some of these comments and I'm just at a loss for words. This community is about more than keynote speeches. If your project denies your patches because you are female, then it's time to join a different project. Hit me up if you need help finding one.

    43. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

      Have you ever seen a good OpenBSD flamewar?

      OpenBSD? Good?

    44. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you miss the percent sign? It's 7, not 700.

    45. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it would be an accurate statement to say that women would LOVE it if men gave birth instead.

    46. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1

      But nobody complains about sexism in HHD - they just accept the fact few men are interested in that field. The same is true in engineering.

      Clearly girls just don't want to be engineers. It couldn't possibly have anything to do with a long history of being male dominated with a resulting "boys club" attitude that leads to "innocent" and pervasive sexist attitudes. Such an attitude, if it existed, certainly wouldn't drive away women who would be fine engineers but have a low tolerance for such abuse (while no such matching barrier exists for men with a low tolerance for abuse). It also couldn't possible lead to encouraging a small number of genuinely sexist men to actively do so, refusing suitable female applicants. That family members and friends may damn the idea of their girls growing up to be engineers with things like, "Well, I guess you could be an engineer" has no impact at all.

      Nope. Girls just don't want to be engineers. Must be something about their genetics.

      (As for HHD, nursing, or whatever other field you care to drag up, feel free to swap out the appropriate genders above and pretend I said that as well.)

    47. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC Theo de Raadt gets fed by his female life-partner who has a good salary along with OpenBSD donations, presumably working as a housewife-o when he isn't hacking and the woman is at work.
      He also has had his own share of flamewars with Richard eMacs-deflowerer Stallman, which probably makes him very close to a (s)hero in the eyes of Open Source feminist crackpots.
      He most likely is somewhat sympathetic to their goals although I don't reckon he has ever said anything in that respect.
      Me I admire him for his work for Freedom and his achievements as a hacker.

    48. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I'd say that 98.5% male, in an activity that requires neither a penis nor vagina, is very good cause to suspect that there is something excluding women from the field. Although I'd expect FOSS developers to be primarily male, since software as a whole is, if the communities could attract even a fairly small number of female contributors that could be significant. Therefore, this is an interesting and potentially productive topic to consider.

      Moreover, if Bryce Byfield is taking abuse while not being abusive, this is apparently an important topic. When people are really uncomfortable with bringing up a topic, I think it's likely worth exploring.

      There doesn't have to be much sexism going on to get this result. If one in fifty of the men in the field are sexist jerks, they outnumber the women, and will likely actively discourage women from joining. It's also entirely possible that such a near-homogenous group adopts some sort of attitude that nobody notices that discourages others. (I've noticed this, as one of the few leftist types in some military history and wargaming forums.) It would probably be useful to ask women in FOSS development what some of their biggest annoyances are.

      It's also worth looking for overtly sexist behavior, but the rest of the replies suggest that there really isn't all that much, and what there is is discouraged by other hackers. I don't think that line of inquiry will be all that fruitful.

      Random accusations of sexism, or denigration of feminists per se, aren't going to accomplish anything except to make the poster feel better and annoy everybody else.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    49. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by glittalogik · · Score: 1

      But what if you're really really good at killing puppies?

    50. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people here have become confused as to what 'sexism' means.

      Some people here are acting like it means 'misogynistic'. Which would be if people were talking about 'slapping bitches around' or something.

      Other people here seem to think it means 'bigoted about genders'. (Which is, indeed, what sexism means.) Which would be if people actually treated fellow OSS coders differently based on gender.

      But neither of those are actually what's going on, except via trolls.

      What's going on is people simply saying thoughtless things and behaving unprofessionally and making people uncomfortable by presenting images of sex, sometimes to the extent of creating a hostile environment. Sexual harassment and sexism are not the same thing.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    51. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Except for all those aptitude tests showing that males are just better at spatial reasoning and higher math then women. Granting that the distributions overlap all you have to do is assume Engineers come from the tails of the distribution and you will naturally have male dominated fields. Same is true for other fields but in reverse.

      Further I believe you will find that all those low paying fields have another thing in common (besides being dominated by women): They are fucking brain dead easy (at least as far as formal training is concerned). Many girls in these majors are still planning on getting a Masters in Residential Science (Mrs) degree. By the time they (formerly girls now women) realize they will be paying their own bills its just too late to start applying themselves. They wind up with basket weaving degrees by default.

      There are well paying fields that have always been female dominated (nursing) or are becoming female dominated (doctors).

      The low paying, easy fields dominated by men tend to not involve college and are hence treated separately.

      Finally didn't the Pythons come to the conclusion that: 'Reg has the right to have children, even though he doesn't have a womb, which is nobodies fault, not even the Romans.'

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    52. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by selven · · Score: 1

      What if they're really really good trinary only drivers?

    53. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently it started out as yet another ad hominem against RMS over a purportedly blasphemous attempt at humor, during the recent Mono debates.Something about Emacs virgins, clearly a reference to the Vestal Virgins. Romans and virgins were, allegedly, not amused. Anyway, Bryce is chivalrously being offended on their behalf. Whether the pious, or the immaculate, of any gender, have even noticed is not known to this correspondent.

      Vive le difference, and may the best code win.
         

    54. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Is it possible this trait is far less common in women than men?" Are you kidding me? You ask for evidence of sexism in your post, yet you provide an abundance of it. And before you ask how that is sexist, think of it this way. Your whole post essentially describes men as hardworking and logical, and paid the right amount. Whereas women lack these traits and get a monetary reward for "having ovaries".

      The mistake everyone on this list seems to be making is that sexism is overt - calling women bitches, making light of rape, or joking about wife bashing in forums or presentations. Of course 90% of you don't do this in real life, or even make light of it. Why would you, you're human beings after all? The point that the article is making is there is an ingrained sexist attitude directed towards women that we don't see, pay attention to, or possibly down right ignore. We all perpetuate this willingly or not, aware of our actions or not. It isn't just ingrained in FOSS, but society in general. The question isn't why is there so few women working with FOSS, but why are the numbers low in the Computer and Engineering industry in general? Instead of rejecting these claims or not doing anything, how about fostering a community that encourages women to participate? With the amount of energy wasted on denying sexism exists, couldn't it have been easier to encourage one woman to join one project?

      In my experience those that deny something with such illogical vehemence go a long way to proving its veracity...

    55. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      There wouldn't be any FOSS project left if that was done.

    56. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1

      Is it possible this trait is far less common in women than men?

      If the medical profession is any indication, yes. The numbers are such that women M.D.'s work about 80% (or there abouts - I believe that is Canadian specific as well) the number of hours as men do. And btw, that number comes from my feminist wife.

      This also fits my personal experience. I've worked with and gone to school with many women. But, none of them were willing to do any programming beyond that in which was required. In fact, none of them were willing to even really talk about anything tech outside of work. For them, it was about the paycheck and nothing more.

      But, to comment on my conduct on mailing lists, etc. I don't even read the name of the person that I'm responding to. I just reply to the content. Which brings up a likely cause (studies have shown this in the work-place) of this /perceived/ sexism; differences in the way men and women communicate. Men tend to be quite aggressive when the do so (relatively speaking) and this tends to get interpreted as an attack by women.

      This also brings up another point. Namely, that, how arrogant does someone have to be, to think that the work-place will change to meet there needs? This is a universal thing, not just applicable here. Here, it must be said that women must understand that in a male dominated industry, that they'll have to learn to live, etc in it. That the industry isn't going to change for them and to assume that, and complain because that isn't happening is asinine. And before anyone spouts off about me being sexist or some such, I expect the same of myself when I enter a new work-place. The "outsider" climatizes to the new environment, or fails.

    57. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Firetoad · · Score: 0

      Finally didn't the Pythons come to the conclusion that: 'Reg has the right to have children, even though he doesn't have a womb, which is nobodies fault, not even the Romans.'

      It was Stan who has the right to have babies, not Reg. And he (Stan) now prefers 'Loretta'.

    58. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am absolutely sick and tired of this stupidity everywhere. Politically correct? F*** you, retarded. You should be doing something practical for the world and yourselves.

    59. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by BorgCopyeditor · · Score: 1

      Except for all those aptitude tests showing that males are just better at spatial reasoning and higher math then women. Granting that the distributions overlap all you have to do is assume Engineers come from the tails of the distribution and you will naturally have male dominated fields.

      Is this supposed to be a specimen of masculine excellence in mathematical reasoning?

      --
      Shop as usual. And avoid panic buying.
    60. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Gender balance and sexism are indeed separate issues. The analysis I have found that had the most interesting explanation for the low percentage of women in OSS compared to other IT areas is that usually people who are involved in OSS have been in IT for 10 years. Therefore, these is a ten years lag in gender balance between regular IT and OSS.

      And I have yet to see any developer uncooperative to someone because of gender. That says a lot about their patience. I have, on the other hand, seen women say "why are you talking computers to me ? I'm a GIRL I can't possibly get into these men's things". Which is, in my humble opinion, a far deeper problem than the alleged sexism of male OSS developers.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    61. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Besides this isn't the only field with gender inequity.

      It's not even the field with the strongest gender inequity, though it's admittedly pretty unbalanced. I used to think almost all computer geeks were male, and then I took a job at a public library...

      As the tech guy, I've on several occasions been sent to various library-related conferences. Now, you may think the gender unbalance in the IT industry is strong, but if you go to a library conference, you find out what gender imbalance really is. At library-related conferences that aren't inherently technical (e.g., OLC trade shows), you don't really think anything about it because, you know, everyone's a librarian, so what? But if you ever go to a library-related *technology* conference (like, a user group for an integrated library automation system), you discover that at least two-thirds of the IT people (system administrators and so on from libraries) are female. I kid you not. The gender imbalance in libraries is so extreme, it overcomes the IT gender balance and pushes the demographic in the other direction.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    62. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      Ehmm, dunno which planet *you* live on, but the one the rest of us call Earth does not have 6.95 billion men ;-)

      Aside from that, the fact that those slightly over 300 men can carry fetuses doesn't mean they've turned it into a fulltime job :P

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    63. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by RichiH · · Score: 1

      I am not sure it's a good idea to pick Theo as an example of unbiased and logical flaming^Wdiscussion.

    64. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and we all know how popular he is.

      Fuck Theo, the arrogant prick.

    65. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or because it's AC and a pop psychology generalization.

    66. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by LinuxAndLube · · Score: 1

      If they are written by women rather than by men, then the chance that they are crappy is higher, no?

      I'm basing this statement on my experience as a Java teacher and as a developer. Does anybody feel that this generalization is wrong?

    67. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

      That's a pretty good starting point.

      I've seen first-hand how women in IT are treated, and I saw the worst of objectification and discrimination. A woman entering an IT department has to be twice as good just to be considered a peer, and them she has to deal with a bunch of immature, socially-retarded little boys. If they don't show interest in dating one of these sticky, overweight odor-bombs, she's called a lesbian.

      I'd like to see affirmative action in IT departments, if only to get the rest of the staff to start taking regular showers.

      Well, FOSS development is typically dispersed geographically and coordinated online. What you pointed is valid concern, but hardly relevant for online communities (unless there is pressure to waste bandwidth on videoconferencing).

      Oh BTW, any new person, regardless of one's gender, entering an IT department, if not of geek fame, has to be twice to five time better just to be considered a peer.

    68. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the summary and grandparent, none of the name calling given contained gender either.

      Seems he suckered people again.

    69. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      From ToFA (linked from TFA)

      Or, if you prefer, listen to the horror stories female developers tell about sexist remarks or being asked out for dates.

      But he doesn't recount any of the horror stories. Where am I supposed to go to hear these stories? What kinds of sexist remarks? And WTF is wrong with asking a woman out for a date? No wonder the author was called homosexual (maybe he's just too cowardly to ask a woman out himself). Women should give a man who asks them out credit for having the balls to ask her out in the first place, and be grateful that she IS being asked out. I've had woman hit on me (men too, unfortunately) but I'd never dream of being as hateful as some woman are when I've aske dthem out. IMO (and logically) any woman who doesn't want to be asked out is either wearing a wedding ring (and yes, asking a married woman out makes one an assshole) or a lesbian.

      You said "Probably random pigs the internet has no shortage of."

      You know, women can be sexist, too. If a woman calls a man a pig, that's a sexist remark.

      I'm just questioning what's causing that.

      Bingo! I didn't see one quote in either story from a woman complaining about sexist remarks or being asked out on dates.

      The author claims FOSS developers are giving illogical answers, but it's Byfield himself who shows no logic, nor gives any examples of what he claims. Perhaps there is sexism in the FOSS commuity, but if so Byfield has shown absolutely no proof whatever. If so he certainly isn't helping the matter any.

    70. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To paraphrase: keep that political bullshit out of here. Code. Or don't.

      Do you say the same thing to FOSS developers who call women bitches? Do you tell them to keep that political bullshit out of here? I suspect the door only swings one way.

    71. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      > Except for all those aptitude tests showing that males are just better at spatial reasoning and higher math then women.

      All those? AFAIK, there is one. It shows that males at that time of test grown up in that particular society performed better than their female counterparts. Those tests fail to separate cultural and social influence from biological ones.
      Thanks for bringing up math as a "biological" example, as it has recently become a female dominated field in many nations, including the US.

      > Further I believe you will find that all those low paying fields have another thing in common (besides being dominated by women): They are fucking brain dead easy [...] By the time they (formerly girls now women) realize they will be paying their own bills its just too late to start applying themselves.

      Do I understand you correctly, that you want to imply that girls/women tend to be less focused future job prospects? Strangely enough, I've read quite the opposite reasoning for the female dominance high-school and higher education in general.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    72. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by npsimons · · Score: 1

      But there's no reason to harp on FOSS developers in particular

      Yes there are a couple of reasons, the first and foremost being: as we hold our software to a higher standard, so should we hold ourselves to a higher standard. FOSS is progressive and egalitarian by it's very nature; why should we not also act that way and not tolerate intolerance?

      Second, prejudice closes the mind, and a closed mind is a less creative one.

    73. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Notice how the GP says that the sexism is all imagined, but that the main reason he wants women to become better represented is to improve the scenery. Nice.

      This is why it's impossible to have a discussion - Strawman Arguments.

      I never said anything like that what you falsely-claim I said. First off, I didn't say "all" sexism is imagined. There are idiots who hate women, just as there are idiots who hate blacks. What I said was "SOMETIMES people see sexism where none exists," as you just demonstrated. I'm not anywhere close to being sexist (if I was I wouldn't defer to the numerous women bosses I've had over the years).

      Second you took my comment that I would like to see fewer men in my office, and twisted it to make it sound like I'm some leering playboy lecher that wants to ogle females ("improve the scenery"). What the hell??? I went to a college where the girls outnumbered the boys 2-to-1. I like having women around, not because of looks, but because they are better conversationalists. Men talk about boring ____ like football, and most times I'd rather hang with the ladies. I stand by my statement of wanting to see fewer men, but not for the reasons you pulled out of your ass.
      .

      >>>Me, I want women to feel more comfortable taking computer related jobs because we're obviously missing out on a lot of talent by discriminating.

      That's one explanation, but there are others. Have you ever considered that computer-related/engineering-related jobs are *boring as shit*??? My freshman lab partner was a girl named Lynn, and she was smarter than I, but eventually she dropped out during her sophomore year. When I asked why - she said she was bored with engineering, and changed to premed.

      I don't blame women for choosing other fields. If I could rewind the clock, I'd probably choose a different path myself. Like nursing or HHD or teaching. More people oriented.

      Sometimes (keyword) different people simply have different interests.
      Sometimes those differences fall along gender lines.
      That's just natural.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    74. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      No sorry.

      THREE.

      Three is the number we were looking for. You made a common mistake of forgetting to divide by 100 to convert your percentage into a decimal. Oh well. Thanks for playing Jeopardy. We have some attractive consolation prizes I'm sure you'll enjoy.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    75. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>>> That's life not sexism, just the same way men can't give birth, which is also not sexism.
      >>
      >>The same way women can't choose their husband, do business, or do vote, drive a car, fight in a war, go to university, study math and science, and finally engineering. Do you see any tendency?
      >>

      Yeah that it's impossible to have a reasonable discussion with unreasonable people who twist & distort your words (strawman arguments). What you listed were *forbidden acts* - women couldn't vote, couldn't drive, go to college, et cetera. Women were BLOCKED in the past. But today nobody's stopping a young woman to choose engineering as a major - they are free to do whatever they want. But many women simply don't want to be engineers.

      For example my old lab partner Lynn started out in engineering, and then after two years she changed to premed. Her choice. She simply didn't like engineering since she said it was "boring". Isn't that what freedom's all about? Not just the right to do something, but also the right NOT to do something?

      I know if I could turn back time, I'd probably do the same. Lynn was right - engineering is boring.
      I think I'd rather be premed or some other people-oriented career.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    76. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Men have penises. Women have vaginas. Men have high testosterone. Women have high estrogen. Men procreate whenever they want, from age 13 to 100. Women procreate once a month, in a cycle, which ends around age 40. Men have bony muscular bodies. Women have softer fat-covered bodies. Men are about 5-6 inches taller. Women have permanent mammary glands. Men are narrow-hipped and women are wide-hipped.

      And yet despite all these differences, you still think male and female brains are identical, and therefore there should be 50-50 identical interest in the field of engineering???

      You're in denial. With all the other extant differences, there's bound to be differences in the brain as well, which will manifest itself as little female interest in engineering (boring toys), and vice-versa little male interest in Health/Human Development majors.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    77. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>It couldn't possibly have anything to do with a long history of being male dominated with a resulting "boys club" attitude that leads to "innocent" and pervasive sexist attitudes.
      >>>

      And it could also just be lack-of-interest, like my friend Lynn. We both started in engineering at the same time, and shared many of the same classes, until she quit during the 2nd year. When I asked her why she mentioned nothing about sexism (because there was none), but instead said she simply found the major boring.

      Of course you'll reject this story, perhaps labeling Lynn as a "traitor to the feminist cause," because that's usually the outcome when I tell this tale. I've seen this same thing for women who voluntarily choose to quit a job and stay home to raise the kids. Those women are vilified by the feminists.

      It HAS to be sexism... it cannot possibly be that women find engineering to be dull & exercise their right to choose something else.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    78. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Gosh, you've got a whole anecdote of data! How could I possibly argue against that?

      Maybe some people say Lynn is a traitor, or that you're lying. I won't. I'll trust that you've recounted the story reasonably accurately, and that Lynn was honest both with you and herself. People leave majors all the time because they find them boring.

      The point isn't that every woman who leaves or never enters engineering or computer science is driven by sexism. Anyone arguing that is arguing nonsense; many men leave or never enter the fields. The argument is that there is a pervasive sexism that is influencing them. Some may be overt, but much is background. You're essentially arguing that women don't like engineering because they're women. Perhaps that is some portion of it, but for it to be such a radical change seems implausible. There is a strong boy-club culture. I've seen it to varying levels at every technical job I've had. It's ranged from as wildly inappropriate as jokes about hiring women to do "under the desk" work to the pervasive and easy to overlook like telling someone to "man up," "have some balls," or "don't get your panties in a bunch." It can as minor as entering an office for an interview and meeting the entirely male staff. (Mind you, that's not sexism, but that doesn't mean it won't be daunting.) Surely some women will be perfectly skilled technically, but not quite able to put up with the culture and find themselves driven out. Surely some women, when exposed to this early on will decide to not enter the field in the first place. Some will pass this message on to their daughters, perhaps in subtle ways like also being a bit strained when discussing the possibility of being an engineer.

      To argue that women are massively underrepresented in engineering fields solely because women are uninterested on some biological level is to simultaneously argue that women are somehow perfectly rational beings, completely influenced by others.

      As it is, I'll see your anecdote and raise you another. I know an M. She's armed with a BS in Computer Science, and works in the field. She likes the work, but she's now pursuing a degree in Law. Why? Because she's tired of the constant background level of sexism she faces working in CS. Nothing overt; no sex jokes, no offensive language. It's subtle but pervasive things. I regrettably cannot remember most of the list of things she mentioned, but the one she called out was repeatedly finding herself at the center point of a semicircle of men when at a technical conference. She found herself not wanting to attend technical conferences because she always found herself subtly being treated not as a peer, but as a potential date.

    79. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by S.P.Zeidler · · Score: 1

      Simple.

      Next time someone kicks a woman off a technical irc chat because "women don't do computers so you must be an impostor" or "you are female so you are not a developer, and this is not a help channel", call them an idiot and tell the woman that she's welcome back in, instead of smiling benignly at the spectacle. Try to avoid telling her she's allowed in if she sends you pics of herself naked and is sufficiently pretty, though.

    80. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      But there's no reason to harp on FOSS developers in particular unless there's evidence that the FOSS community is more sexist than the rest of the world (which I, at least, haven't seen). If that evidence isn't there, then keep on fighting the good fight against sexist pigs in general, wherever you find them.

      It's hard to be sure if it's a one-on-one correlation but there are a lot less women in FOSS than there are in the general programmer population. Not to mention a lot of women in FOSS seem to have the impression that there's a problem. Them having first hand experience I think we can take their word for it (anecdote vs. data of course, but I just gave you the data).

    81. Re:No Denial Here But What Are the Reasons? by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      I've seen first-hand how women in IT are treated, and I saw the worst of objectification and discrimination. A woman entering an IT department has to be twice as good just to be considered a peer, and them she has to deal with a bunch of immature, socially-retarded little boys. If they don't show interest in dating one of these sticky, overweight odor-bombs, she's called a lesbian.

      I'd like to see affirmative action in IT departments, if only to get the rest of the staff to start taking regular showers.

      Yeah, insult your audience, that'll work. Replacing one stereotype by another is simply not okay. Whatever problem IT might have with respect to women, spreading this kind of bullshit is not gonna make it any better.

  3. Don't be so damn sensitive by religious+freak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah I guess you may have encountered some jokes, but it's your code that matters, not your plumbing. If you're offended by jokes, joke back or say it's inappropriate - in the informal community of FOSS, that's about all you can do.

    If you truly think you're a victim, create an androgynous pseudonym. The tone of OP's article suggests a hyper sensitivity to me.

    --
    If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    1. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by nomadic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah I guess you may have encountered some jokes, but it's your code that matters

      Either it's a community or it isn't. Getting rude anonymous comments is one thing; getting them in a mailing list going back and forth between a small group of developers, that's something different.
      As for this idea that only the quality of the code matters in how you're treated, I don't think that's not true. There is an immaturity and a narcissism prevalent among coders, and I think a lot of them would be enraged to find themselves outcoded by a woman, but wouldn't mind it so much being outdone by a man.

      Sexism is like racism in the OSS community; there but nobody wants to talk about it (though the racism has been a lot more overt in some situations).

    2. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by flaming+error · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > create an androgynous pseudonym
      And if people harass them offline, should they just cross-dress as men, or should women go get sex-reassignment surgery?

    3. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by hedwards · · Score: 1

      It's the internet, people rarely care enough to track a particular person down from information sniffed from packets. It's unlikely that anybody is going to care enough about some random internet person to look for information if it isn't provided. Not that that's really a proper answer, but it's not like you can't make up an internet persona. Hell lots of people do it just for the hell of it.

    4. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      *sigh* what's the point of showing that you're a woman or a man... you are "nomadic (141991)" to me, I don't know your gender and don't care. If you submit a piece of code, I don't go searching for info on you as a person, I look at the code, and review it as-is.

      I once had a long series of discussions on the underground art scene with someone in IRC over several weeks... never knew it was a woman at all during that time (only found out later why she stopped dropping in, after I found out she was in playboy). You have a level of anonymity on the net that can be a great benefit and to be honest nobody, so far as I know, actually seems to have an issue with it except for those that are victimizing themselves.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    5. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by nomadic · · Score: 1

      *sigh* what's the point of showing that you're a woman or a man... you are "nomadic (141991)" to me, I don't know your gender and don't care. If you submit a piece of code, I don't go searching for info on you as a person, I look at the code, and review it as-is.

      Great, if I'm an anonymous contributor. But what about the sizeable number of named developers, especially on larger, more prominent projects? If the "solution" is to become anonymous and hide every indication of your sex, it seems to me that that indicates a somewhat severe problem. There are a great deal of many people posting here would be positively furious if their code was fixed/rewritten by a female who was a better programmer than them.

    6. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Named Bruce

    7. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by turtledawn · · Score: 1

      But why should we have to hide?

      --
      Uh, "if it looks roughly mouse-shaped according to my infra-red sensitive pit, eat it"? --Chris Burke 09-08-10
    8. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      There are a great deal of many people posting here would be positively furious if their code was fixed/rewritten by a female who was a better programmer than them.

      Actually, I disagree, I think the vast majority of people would be furious if their code was fixed and/or rewritten by a better programmer than then. Regardless of what your gender is, you have to be aware of observer bias when looking at social interactions, most developers I've met tend to be possessive of their work and don't like it when someone else critiques it, even more so when it is completely scraped in favor of something better.

    9. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by Cederic · · Score: 1

      There are a great deal of many people posting here would be positively furious if their code was fixed/rewritten by a female who was a better programmer than them.

      That's supposition; if you replaced 'female' with 'person' in your sentence it wouldn't necessarily be any less true.

      Why not really hit the stereotypes and replace "positively furious" with "aroused and attracted"?

      Blanket statements that imply sexism help contribute to an atmosphere that can be perceived as such, even in the absence of sexist behaviours. Try treating people positively.

    10. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a great deal of many people posting here would be positively furious if their code was fixed/rewritten by anyone who was a better programmer than them.

      FTFY

    11. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your entire post is a "man up" reply. Funny how it's in a thread raising issues about potential sexism.

      If you're offended by jokes, joke back

      Uh, yeah, and physically abused women should just punch their husbands back. Now, you're going to give me the knee-jerk response that jokes are not physical abuse to which I will answer that psychological violence is still violence. You can repeat "It's a joke." until you're blue in the face, if you're being derogatory, offensive, disgusting, you're violent.

      Violence doesn't stop at sucker punches.

    12. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Equating people saying something offensive to physical violence against women is an insult to those women who have been abused as well as the intelligence of anyone who happened to read your comment.

      Really, if OP is so offended that they cannot 1) joke back, 2) Ask the person to stop, 3) Create an androgynous pseudonym, or 4) Find some higher quality people to code with... they need to find a different hobby.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    13. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Equating people saying something offensive to physical violence against women [...]

      Except I didn't. I said both are forms of violence. It was pretty clear.

      And the answer to violence is not more of it.

    14. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      I have been both, the mental abuse sticks, I'll talk for myself, asshole.

    15. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Then you're too sensitive and you allow people to control your life too much. Fix yourself.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    16. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      People kill each other for mental abuse, not for physical abuse, you're an ignorant fool. Also, nice job belittling others.

    17. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Were you expecting a polite response after calling me an asshole for no reason?

      The topic of this conversation was someone who felt belittled because she was a woman in the FOSS community, of all things. This is not the type of mental abuse people kill for, you are stuck in your own issues and not paying attention to the one under discussion or the point I'm making about the issue under discussion.

      If someone were to kill another person over a comment related to FOSS, there were other mental issues prior to FOSS comments.

      My point still stands: if you're sitting in front of a computer and someone is consistently belittling you and it is affecting you emotionally, hit the off switch. And if you can't do that, the issue is not with FOSS, it is with you.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    18. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but if your only reaction is to say man up, then you completely missed the point. Also, every physical abuse is mental abuse, in fact, the part that hurts the most is usually mental.

      Also, you decided to build a strawman in the name of women who were abused, I replied angrily because I am a woman who used to deal with people (men, women, intersex, other, wev) who were abused, and I have been abused at a later date, if you think the worst part is not mental, you've probably never dealt with abuse or rape survivors.

      Also, it's not just about attitude on internet groups, but even there, why should this behavior be tolerated, because the person abused is anonymous? Because the internet is somehow less real? Both are bullshit - there are FOSS conferences and this abuse is continued. There's email stalking that gets done, there's a real world community it leads to, if you can't see how the internet extends to the real world when there's communities forming about something both IRL and URL that have the same people, I suggest you completely, utterly miss the point of Internet as a communication system.

    19. Re:Don't be so damn sensitive by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Interesting points, I will consider them. Thanks.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
  4. re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I stopped reading after "I'm not complaining"

    1. Re:re by AP31R0N · · Score: 3, Funny

      You sound fat.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    2. Re:re by Trifthen · · Score: 1

      Hey, leave your Fark-isms off my Slashdot!

      --
      Read: Rabbit Rue - Free serial nove
    3. Re:re by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Um, mammaries of fare thee well?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  5. How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ....when the sex of the contributor is more often than not completely unknown?

    I see a contribution from a "Terry", I have no idea if that is a male or female, and really why would I care? Either the code is god, o rit isn't. Why would sex ever have any bearing at all?

    Frankly I really don't even get how a claim of sexism could exist in the FOSS world. It just doesn't translate from meat-space, because frankly, more often than not you have no idea the sex of the person in the first place. And really, that is how it should be.

    1. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by jandrese · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a girl!). If there is some sort of glass ceiling on FOSS projects, then I don't see how it is supposed to work. Maybe the sexism is that girls don't want to work with creepy nerds and "creepy nerd" is pretty much the stereotype for FOSS developers?

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    2. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by CorporateSuit · · Score: 2, Funny

      I would imagine that the average FOSS developer would probably get a short high on the idea that some chick who calls herself "SexyAngel69" added a line of code to his project. He'd probably sit back in his chair, close his eyes and say: "It's almost like she just had sex with me" and then tell his WoW guild he thinks he just DING!'d IRL.

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
    3. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this supposed to be a joke?

      I hope so...

    4. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ....when the sex of the contributor is more often than not completely unknown?

      Sexism does not have to be directed at a particular person. For example RMS makes silly jokes about female emacs virgins:

      http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/EMACS_virgins_joke

      which are quite annoying if you happen to be female and don't care to have your sexuality linked to whether you use a text editor in the minds of the men sitting around you in the audience. Or, as another example, this story is tagged 'sendthemtothekitchen'. This sort of juvenile joke contributes to an atmosphere in which women do not feel welcome.

      I suspect there's more going on than sexism, given the huge gender imbalance in people even starting to study IT, but the sexism rife in the IT industry certainly doesn't help.

    5. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by jgrahn · · Score: 1

      I see a contribution from a "Terry", I have no idea if that is a male or female, and really why would I care? Either the code is god, o rit isn't. Why would sex ever have any bearing at all?

      Frankly I really don't even get how a claim of sexism could exist in the FOSS world. It just doesn't translate from meat-space, because frankly, more often than not you have no idea the sex of the person in the first place. And really, that is how it should be.

      A lot of people don't want to hide, a lot of others don't like dealing with pseudonyms, and most people aren't called Terry. If there is a problem, going anonymous isn't a general-purpose answer.

      What I *don't* see is why anyone should be surprised, or what the "FOSS" "community" is supposed to do about it. Or what kind of people Byfield met who think there is 30--45% women in free software.

    6. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the context is in response to a statement suggesting that there can't be shown sexism against women because, for the most part, there's no way of knowing if the person you're interacting with is male/female.

      But it sounds like you'll just take the answer that sexism exists and make any "proof" lead back to that.

    7. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a girl!).

      Why didn't you write

      Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a boy!).

      I'd take this is a reasonably harmless example of sexism, but quite clear proof that sexism exists, and sexist persons are not even aware of it.

      Boy? Girl? Why not man or woman? Should I take this as proof that ageism exists, and that ageist persons are not even aware of it?

      Let's not even start on fair representation of species... :-)

    8. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by ildon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So it's sexist to take the actual ratio of men and women (you know, FACTS) into account when trying to use one of the two as an example of "less plausible"?

      This is often the trap that accusers of sexism, racism, homophobia, etc. run into when making their accusations. People are not going to ignore the reality around them and change their language to just assume that all people are equally represented when they are not, and to expect them to additionally do it in the midst of a discussion about that very imbalance is just moronic.

      Talking like balance already exists does not achieve balance.

    9. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by nschubach · · Score: 1

      I'd count that as oversensitivity. I read that as nobody knows your a dog or a girl. He could have said teapot (or a girl!) and it would mean the exact same thing... nothing.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    10. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put it in context.
      We are discussing sexism in a context of sexist attitudes against women. That is probably the reason he tiped girl instead of boy, that and that he probably meant boy when he typed dog.

      Would you still be raising your sexisms accousations if he said "a boy (or a girl!)." ?
      Why not "a girl (or a boy!)."?

      That's just idiotic.

    11. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by B4light · · Score: 1

      Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a boy!).

      Because 98.5% of FOSS coders are male, and cats.

    12. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or, as another example, this story is tagged 'sendthemtothekitchen'. This sort of juvenile joke contributes to an atmosphere in which women do not feel welcome.

      Welcome to the Internet, where no stereotype is not mocked.

    13. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by digitalgiblet · · Score: 1

      Although you have been modded "Insightful," I truly hope you meant to be funny (which seems likely due to the wording of the post).

      FOSS is about community as much as it is about code.

      Although you can't tell someone's gender by the code they write, you sure can tell in a real community with potential "meat-space" interactions (conferences, etc.).

      Saying that women won't be picked on in community interactions if they pretend to be male is ludicrous. There is absolutely no reason they should have to pretend anything to be treated with respect.

      I'm afraid these kinds of attitudes will forever marginalize FOSS in the wider world if not addressed. It does not matter in the minds of the public at large if 90% of the FOSS developers are good people if 10% are so loud and so obnoxious that theirs are the only voices heard.

    14. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Obfuscant · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why didn't you write Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a boy!).

      Because, apparently, it is a "girl" who is complaining about sexism. It is quite natural in that context to use female references ("she" vs. "he", "girl" vs. "boy", etc.) It would be stupid, when talking to a female, to say something like "nobody knows you're a boy", because she isn't.

      It is, however, part of the culture of victimhood, to pick out one word in a paragraph and claim that it is sexism because it has a specific gender meaning.

      I'd take this is a reasonably harmless example of sexism, but quite clear proof that sexism exists, and sexist persons are not even aware of it.

      I'd take this as the insufferable attitude of superiority that "victims" have, being the only people on the planet smart enough to be able to detect that they are being victimized. "I'm a victim of XXX, and if you were smarter you'd see how I was being victimized..." "Come see the violence inherent in the system".

      Yes, sexism still exists, but it is damaging to the cause of those who fight true sexism for all this pretend victimhood to be waved around all the time. All it does is turn away the people who you want on your side. Jumping down the throat of someone who used the word "girl" and claiming he's an ignorant sexist just makes YOU look like a loon, and by association, all the other people who have serious and reasonable sexism complaints.

      There is a difference between "sexism" (an act) and a correlation that only X % of Y are women. There is also a difference between sexism the act and a moron who thinks it's funny to put porn in a powerpoint presentation, even when 98% of his audience is going to be male. (Here's a free clue: not all men find porn to be funny or appropriate, so stop pretending that the only people offended by the alleged ruby presentation problem mentioned above were the women.)

    15. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the Internet, where no stereotype is not mocked.

      Well, I've certainly noticed that on the internet people will make up implausible post-hoc excuses up for anything if it means they don't have to accept they were wrong!

      Perhaps you can think of one for RMS too while you're here.

    16. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why do women have to feel welcome? I'm a white dude and I feel unwelcome everywhere I go. Is that just me?

    17. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      The article is about women you dolt. No shit he said girl. That was the comparison.

    18. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by sohp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sexism is an attitude, it doesn't have to be directed at specific individuals. If DHH says "Speaking of presentations. I'd much rather we banished kung-fu kittens and went with beautiful women for the filler stock art. Works in ads!" that's sexism, even though he's not directing a denigrating comment to a specific woman.

      Also: some people in FOSS actually leave the parents' basement and meet face-to-face. Shocking, I know.

    19. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      I resent that implication, as I am a dog, dag nab it.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    20. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      It's the same argument as you'll find in CS and Math departments. There are less women who want to be there, therefore the boys club must be discouraging them from even trying. Therefore, we are sexist. It doesn't matter than in FOSS we don't even KNOW that they're women. The mere fact that most FOSS developers are men makes women not want to associate with it. In CS programs they're always worried as hell about how few women apply, that they're going to be sued as sexist, even if they accept all female applicants. It's a serious and eternal panic. Affirmative action makes it worse. If you accept applicants based only on their qualifications, you get blasted for accepting so few women (because so few women applied) and are sexist. But do you know what they say when they see how much lower women score in your courses? Your faculty is sexist and marks women more harshly. It's a no-win situation. The feminists propose the solution of making Math more sexy. They claim Math was designed by men, for men, to exclude women by making it unappealing to them. This always strikes me as a horribly sexist opinion, but what do I know, with my primitive male brain.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    21. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      As someone that's worked as one of the only men in a couple of different places, I can state that it's more the case of a sheer number imbalance and a natural event. Put a dozen women together, and there will be derogatory comments about men.. same goes the other way.

      The real issue at hand, is it worse than the general population. If you put 98 men in a room with two women how would the conversation go? Now do it online... The fact is that the FOSS discussion boards/lists are far more mild than the general population, and in this case is a non-issue being forced into one.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    22. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words: Lena Söderberg.

      You're 37 years too late...

    23. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Virak · · Score: 1

      Ah, that incident. I love that, because it clearly shows exactly which side the problem is on. See this for the finer details. Most importantly is this part, from from Stallman himself:

      The cult of the Virgin of Emacs is simply intended as a joke about the cult of the Virgin Mary. I assure anyone who perceived derogatory meanings in it that I did not intend them.

      So what really happened is Stallman made a (admittedly unfunny) joke about religion, and even after he calmly and maturely explained their error to them, whiny 'feminist' idiots continued to take it out of context and act like it was evidence that the leader of the free software movement is some evil rape advocate, when he is, at most, sorely lacking in social skills.

      The problem with feminism these days is that it is far too much like a religion. There's the vast majority who are just in it to fit in with other people like them or because that's how they've been raised, who will put up a bit of obligatory moral outrage when they have to but not really do anything of note. There's the minority that's absolutely fucking batshit insane who are worked into a righteous fury over most of modern society, and will do things of note, but you'll certainly wish they didn't. And the crumbs that are left over constitute the bit that are actually good people and have taken from their belief system more than just hatred and disgust at the world.

    24. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously... The difference is totally on the receiving end. As a white male, I get jokes about white guy this, white guy that... now that I'm older, I get the old man jokes too. I'm bald, I get bald jokes. I wear glasses... 4 eyes, anyone? And you know what? I couldn't give a damn. We're all having fun. The gal with the mustache, if she makes a bald joke, I joke about her mustache. We laugh, even high five, and move on. The point is, there is a bunch of thinned skinned people out there actively looking to feel insulted. It's not just women, either. I've heard people say, "Grow a pair" in response to reports of sexism in computing and FOSS... and while that remark *is* sexist, the message I think they're trying to actually convey and lack the ability to communicate is, "Please people... show some tolerance. No one is trying to hurt you."

      If you walk around through life always looking for who's insulting you, and let it get to you... you're life is going to suck, and then you're going to whine about it, which will make people treat you worse. My advise? Please people, just realize no one INTENDED harm against you or your class. They're talking, and often times say things they've learned from society, or even sometimes talk out their asses... but there was no harm intended. So please just realize that, recognize that people are people, and often times say things, and have never really spent hours or days troubling over every sentence to think how they might offend community a, b, or c.

      Now if you have someone start insulting you directly, or questioning your decisions directly based on your gender, race, or whatever... THEN you have a person that should be talked to / re-trained. But otherwise, can't we just get along?

      Why do I say this? Because I personally don't care who is offended... get the job done. Don't care who you are, what gender you are, what you look like, sound like, smell like. Just get the job done. If you have time to actively look for things to offend you, then maybe you should be coding instead.

      Now shut up, all of you, and get back to work! :)

    25. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Nope

    26. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      RMS is just... weird.

      I mean he's seriously odd in RL. It's immediately obvious even at short conferences.

      I don't think he's as much sexist as completely tactless and out of touch with the way you're supposed to behave in public, because he's got an overall very strange way of behaving that pretty much anybody, of any gender is going to find bizarre.

      I don't think he makes a good example of sexism because that one incident is just a tiny part of his weirdness. It's like including somebody with a bad case of autism in a list of very shy people. Not only that's not even half of his problems, but the root issue is probably something entirely different.

    27. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....when the sex of the contributor is more often than not completely unknown?

      Sexism can be an issue.

      For example, if some people in a FOSS voice opinions that degrade women it can make any women reading those opinions uncomfortable even if no one knows that she is a women!

      It isn't just, no-girls-allowed. It is also about creating and maintaining an environment where people of either gender are comfortable working.

    28. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OMFG, we need a -1 Sexist moderation just for you.

    29. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      "Speaking of presentations. I'd much rather we banished kung-fu kittens and went with beautiful women for the filler stock art. Works in ads!"

      How is that sexism? Is it similarly ageist if I say "When advertising this children's toy, we should try to include young kids not old people, because that works better?"

      Statistics and research in and of themselves are not necessarily sexist even if the findings are about sex, gender, sexism, or something related. Where do you personally draw the line I wonder?

    30. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by kramerd · · Score: 1

      Welcome to planet Earth, where no stereotype is not mocked.

      FTFY

    31. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Virak · · Score: 1

      Hate to reply to my own post, but the last bit is a bit unclear. I don't mean to imply that the apathetic masses are full of hatred and disgust, as they are the apathetic masses, I just meant the second group.

      I really would like to see less sexism, less racism, and so on, but sadly most efforts against them are little more than political correctness, good old fashioned overly restrictive moralism in a snazzy new suit, and the people who might genuinely help are largely pushed aside as not 'progressive' enough.

    32. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by sohp · · Score: 1

      Denial.

    33. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Well, I've certainly noticed that on the internet people will make up implausible post-hoc excuses up for anything if it means they don't have to accept they were wrong!

      You mean like the pathetically ridiculous claim I saw upthread about RMS being a "leader of the FOSS movement" and "if the leader of the movement is a sexist then the movement is sexist"? You mean "implausible post-hoc excuses" like that?

      The "leader of the movement" is a slightly-unbalanced long-haired bearded zealot. Does that mean EVERY developer of FOSS is a slightly-unbalanced long-haired bearded zealot? The current leader of the Democratic Party in the US is a young half-African-American socialist man. Does that make every Democrat young, half-African-American, male and a socialist?

      The FOSS "movement" has nothing to do with sex, so the "leaders" views on sex have nothing to do with it.

    34. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe there is a reason to be thin skinned. Like white, bald men with glasses never were denied the right to vote. And you have to admit that the message of equal rights not arrived everywhere.

    35. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 0, Troll

      Consider guys in IT generally take the piss out of each other, I'm not sure why women feel they should be treated any differently. in fact, isn't that the point of equality that you're treated the same?

      If you prefer an environment where people aren't as humorous but instead talk about how well each other is dressed and other safe bland crap then perhaps you should look for IT jobs in places where individuality has already been neutered, like government offices, old well established companies or your kitchen.

    36. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I take that whole thing as being quite positive. After all, women are only 52% of the population. Managing to talk and only offend or alienate 52% of the potential audience is probably a record for RMS.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    37. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I was looking for a serious response. Here are some great definitions of sexism: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sexism

      Which one do you think applies the most to the statement you quoted?

    38. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      You mean like the pathetically ridiculous claim I saw upthread about RMS being a "leader of the FOSS movement" and "if the leader of the movement is a sexist then the movement is sexist"? You mean "implausible post-hoc excuses" like that?

      That does sound ridiculous doesn't it, however it's not post-hoc, and it has nothing to do with my statement, or the one I was responding to. I didn't make that comment, but you are welcome to reply to the comment you wish to respond to, rather than ranting on a completely separate thread about entirely unrelated things.

      The FOSS "movement" has nothing to do with sex, so the "leaders" views on sex have nothing to do with it.

      This I'd agree with, and note that I don't really agree with the submitter of the article (bit of a troll this article), however I can't agree with someone saying that the sex of people talking is unknown therefore sexism cannot exist, that is patent nonsense (see the actual comment I responded to, and my response).

      Have a nice day.

    39. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      Really? Are you aware of what he said exactly? It is in that article you linked to, but I have to assume for some reason you discount direct quotes of him and instead rely on his after the fact interpretation of his bizarre statements?

      So what really happened is Stallman made a (admittedly unfunny) joke about religion, and even after he calmly and maturely explained their error to them, whiny 'feminist' idiots continued to take it out of context and act like it was evidence that the leader of the free software movement is some evil rape advocate, when he is, at most, sorely lacking in social skills.

      I'll ignore the petulant tone of your riposte and bizarre references to rape - no one except you brought up rape, and it's kind of inappropriate frankly. Let's contrast his dissembling after the fact with what he actually said, as quoted by multiple people who were there:

      '"EMACS virgins" are "women who have never used EMACS" and said that it was a sacred duty to "relieve them of their virginity".

      The joke was not about religion, but about having sex with women who have not used his favourite text editor - he's comparing initiation into the rites of EMACS to having sex; RMS is simply trying to misdirect talking about religion because he's embarrassed about what he said. It was a silly sexist remark, but apparently he can't find it in himself to admit fault. It's not big deal really, but I'd find it annoying if it was directed at me, and understand why others would too.

      However, he is kind of bizarre generally, so I guess that sort of weird remark is just par for the course with him.

    40. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      I don't think he makes a good example of sexism because that one incident is just a tiny part of his weirdness. It's like including somebody with a bad case of autism in a list of very shy people. Not only that's not even half of his problems, but the root issue is probably something entirely different.

      Sure, I don't think he should be burned at the stake for it, though he could own up and say sorry if he offended people. RMS probably didn't even mean to be sexist, it just exposed some of his strange ideas on the relationship (apparently amusing and informative to him) of having sex and using text editors.

      It was really just an example that came to mind of being sexist without a particular target or addressing it at anyone of a certain gender (since the grandparent claimed this was impossible).

    41. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by I_want_information · · Score: 1

      Why do women have to feel welcome? I'm a white dude and I feel unwelcome everywhere I go. Is that just me?

      Why do we need to make them feel not welcome? What interest does that advance?

    42. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Yes, sexism still exists,

      And IT ALWAYS WILL, just like racism. This is a fact, regardless of how much you'd like to deny it.

      Males and Females are different, thank god. It is natural that we are going to have natural tendancies to do one thing or another, to be better at some things and worse at others. Race is the same way. If were weren't DIFFERENT we would all be the same color, build, height, ect.

      If your goal in life is to abolish racism or sexism you're going to lead a pretty unhappy and ignorant life.

      Racism and sexism alone are not bad. The help us make assumptions about how people are going to react, their preferences about things, and likely strengths and weaknesses. This process of stereotyping and generalization about groups of people is something our mind learned to do just fine on its own and occurs to animals of all ages even without anyone pushing an agenda on them. Racism and sexism are useful in the world we have evolved in and will be as long as people are different. How we categorize people into groups may change (we may no longer have racism because interracial mixing has basically done away with what we now call 'race'), but we're going to do it no matter what. Our brain profiles without our consent. EVERYONEs brain does, deal with it.

      The real problem is not racism or sexism, its hate and fear. In the case of this particular article it would appear to me that someone is actually trying to insight hate and fear using sexism as a source and an example that just doesn't exist.

      In my limited worldly experience, 9 times out of 10 when someone is screaming 'racism' or 'sexism' they are in fact themselves the 'racist' or 'sexist' person.

      Heres the simple solution to both racism, sexism and myism (above). Remember that these are stereotypes and don't apply to EVERYONE equally. Don't assume that someone is being hateful towards you because of your race or sex right off the bat. Maybe they are just ignorant or unthoughtful at the moment, it is also possibly that you are in fact wrong because of other events in your life they have no knowledge of.

      On the internet its even worse, someone who would normally be very considerate of someones race or sex may make some horrible jokes because they don't realize it is offensive to you because it targets your 'group'. This does not make it THEIR problem, its yours if you are offended.

      Think about it for a second. Does the comment or treatment make sense for you, does it actually apply TO YOU? No? Then move the fuck on and don't start some holy crusade because it may offend someone else. If it does apply to you then why? If its true then get over it, if its untrue for YOU PERSONALLY, is it the stereotype true in general? Yes, then again, shut the hell up, thats life, we are all different and have strengths and weaknesses.

      Of course as with any stereotype or set of generalizations they are just they, they don't apply to everyone or every situation. For instances if you came up to me and said 'this person in southern Georgia is a racist bastard', it would be a safe bet that you were right. However, I do know plenty of people in the area that aren't hateful fucks, so it'd be hard for me to condemn anyone for it until I saw it myself. Now if everyone else would try it...

      If someone truly is a racist/sexist hateful fuck, it usually stands out pretty clearly to everyone around them. It tends to be something thats hard to hide, you won't need to call them on being a hateful bastard, everyone will already know and there is a really good chance they won't get that far in life unless they are surrounded by other hateful bastards. In that situation it is probably more useful for everyone involved if you just separate yourself from those people. Let them die, stuck in their ways, don't let them get to you and make you hateful as well. Sometimes the proper fix to a situation is to leave it.

      I've yet, in my development career to run into any company or group of programmers who accepted hateful people who take it out on others, its just too much drama, annoyance and shame for the rest of us to put up with it.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    43. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Virak · · Score: 1

      bizarre references to rape - no one except you brought up rape, and it's kind of inappropriate frankly

      Maybe you didn't pay attention to the drama around this when it first happened, but I did, and there were references to rape. Here's one, for example: "talking about relieving women of their virginity casts women in a submissive role, with men in a dominant role, and brings up thoughts of oppression and (indirectly) rape." Also see the comments of the blog post I linked to for a couple more rape mentions.

      The joke was not about religion, but about having sex with women who have not used his favourite text editor - he's comparing initiation into the rites of EMACS to having sex;

      The whole "St. IGNUcius"/"Church of Emacs" thing is a giant joke about religion. Either this little bit is about religion like all of the rest of it, or it's rape humor. And don't try to say "nobody brought up rape". If you're reading it as actually about sex, then there's no way you can interpret 'sacred duty to "relieve them of their virginity"' as being about anything but rape.

      RMS is simply trying to misdirect talking about religion because he's embarrassed about what he said.

      Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha oh that's a good one. Stallman? Embarrased? The claim is ridiculous even at a glance, and it's even more ridiculous when you take into account that he has been doing the St. IGNUcius skit pretty much exactly the same, including the "Emacs virgins" thing for decades now (as the wiki you yourself linked to notes). And now he's supposed to be embarrassed about what he said like it's some new material he just worked in and he's secretly ashamed at all the people he's offended? Your lack of knowledge about a man you claim to know the secret true opinion of is rather impressive.

      It was a silly sexist remark, but apparently he can't find it in himself to admit fault.

      Oh drop the Internet psychologist bullshit. And "silly sexist remark"? Discrimination against half of humanity is hardly "silly". You seem to think "sexist" means "offends women with thin skin". It doesn't. Actual sexism is hardly something "silly", and lumping un-PC jokes into the same category as things like a business that makes it far harder for its female employees to advance than male ones, or a person who thinks contraception is a sin because the only reason women exist is to be good wives and mothers, is quite frankly disgusting. The continued devaluing of the word "sexism" by people who claim to be fighting it is baffling.

      It's not big deal really, but I'd find it annoying if it was directed at me, and understand why others would too.

      If you told these people they were just "annoyed" and that it's "not a big deal really", I think you'd find they're not so much in agreement with you as you think.

      You're wrong with your idea of the facts about, well, everything here, and thus so are all of the conclusions you've made. Next time don't talk about things you're ignorant of like you're not.

    44. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Cederic · · Score: 1

      That isn't sexism, that's acerbic critique of the advertising industry.

      In fact, it's supporting the feminist cause, by highlighting an area of genuine sexism, preyed upon by that advertising industry. If society at large (male and female) didn't respond positively to beautiful women in association with products (of whatever type) then the advertising industry would not continue to use them, and the comparison to kung-fu kittens would no longer be required.

      Since feminism is in fact sexist (by promoting women ahead of men, irrespective of capability) then I guess the presentation was indeed sexist - against men. Seems I agree with you after all.

      Denial? Only in those that don't stop to think.

    45. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by antdude · · Score: 1

      And I am a red virgin male alate or a female worker ant. :P

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    46. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Welcome to the Internet, where no stereotype is not mocked."

      That's horrid. I'm going to 4chan where people are treated with respect!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    47. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Stiletto · · Score: 1

      So, if one belongs to a gender/racial/ethnic group whose members, somewhere in the world, at some time in history, have ever been discriminated against for any reason, that makes it understandable to be perpetually thin-skinned and looking for opportunities to be insulted/offended around every corner?

      Or, in other words: My ancestors are Irish. Is it reasonable for me to be offended by harmless "immigrant jokes"?

    48. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      That does sound ridiculous doesn't it, however it's not post-hoc,...

      Yes, it most certainly is post-hoc. The claim that "FOSS is sexist" because the person who is one of the leaders is must be post-hoc. Otherwise you'd be claiming that the person in charge is sexist because FOSS is sexist. Which came first, RMS or FOSS? If RMS came first, then the sexism in FOSS is post-hoc.

      ...and it has nothing to do with my statement,...

      ... people will make up implausible post-hoc excuses up ... Perhaps you can think of one for RMS too while you're here.

      Seems relevant to your statement. I know it is opposite what you intended, that someone would come up with some implausible excuse EXCUSING RMS and not some nonsense reason using RMS as proof of sexism in FOSS, but it's still relevant. And you did seem to be asking for an "implausible post-hoc excuse for RMS".

      I didn't make that comment,...

      I didn't say you did, and I was rather explicit that it was "upthread", not quoting you. I was replying to your statement about implausible excuses.

      ... however I can't agree with someone saying that the sex of people talking is unknown therefore sexism cannot exist, that is patent nonsense (see the actual comment I responded to, and my response).

      I have no idea what "sex" you are. I've had no reason to look at your /. handle, and I don't intend to. You may have looked at mine, and I challenge you to determine beyond reasonable doubt my sex from it. So, yes, for the very most part, I certainly have no clue what sex person I'm talking to here, and I don't particularly care who wrote the FOSS I'm using. I don't bother looking there, either. When I comment, you cannot assume that what I've written is because the other person is a "girl".

      I don't know what you think you accomplish be telling me to look at your response. I quoted the parts I was replying to so you know I saw it. Perhaps I'm seeing "I'm a victim and you are too stupid to see it" in your writing, but I hope you aren't trying to play that game.

      oops. I just scrolled up to review your response and I saw your /. handle. "Serious Callers Only". Please be explicit in describing exactly what gender information I am to gather from such a handle. Do you think there is some there? How can I use the information in your handle to be discriminating against you due to your sex or prejudiced based on it?

    49. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The joke was not about religion, but about having sex with women who have not used his favourite text editor - he's comparing initiation into the rites of EMACS to having sex;

      No, it was about introducing new people to emacs. He switches the gender back and forth or leaves it out at his whim. And yes, opening yourself to what emacs is is very much like having sex the first time - it will change your attitude about a lot of things and open up a new world.

      RMS is simply trying to misdirect talking about religion because he's embarrassed about what he said.

      I can't really see RMS being embarrassed about anything.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    50. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd take this as the insufferable attitude of superiority that "victims" have, being the only people on the planet smart enough to be able to detect that they are being victimized. "I'm a victim of XXX, and if you were smarter you'd see how I was being victimized..." "Come see the violence inherent in the system".

      It's not about intelligence. It's about education, familiarity, and life experiences.

      If you are a man, you naturally have very little experience with the forms of sexism that women face.* That's not an issue of intelligence, but experience. We men tend to underestimate the impact of those experiences. When a feminist tries to educate a man about the many inequities women still face, it's not an attempt to assert superiority. It's an attempt at education.

      Of course, this education isn't always phrased in polite terms, and some people object to the idea that there is anything new for them to learn. So the conversation often goes badly. But there is clear evidence that women aren't afforded the same opportunities in society:

      C. Megan Urry, a professor of physics and astronomy at Yale who led the American delegation to an international conference on women in physics in 2002, said there was clear evidence that societal and cultural factors still hindered women in science.

      Dr. Urry cited a 1983 study in which 360 people - half men, half women - rated mathematics papers on a five-point scale. On average, the men rated them a full point higher when the author was "John T. McKay" than when the author was "Joan T. McKay." There was a similar, but smaller disparity in the scores the women gave.

      Dr. Spelke, of Harvard, said, "It's hard for me to get excited about small differences in biology when the evidence shows that women in science are still discriminated against every stage of the way."

      A recent experiment showed that when Princeton students were asked to evaluate two highly qualified candidates for an engineering job - one with more education, the other with more work experience - they picked the more educated candidate 75 percent of the time. But when the candidates were designated as male or female, and the educated candidate bore a female name, suddenly she was preferred only 48 percent of the time. [source]

      * Yes they do.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    51. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      find / | grep man
      find / | grep cat
      find / | grep woman
      find / | grep dog

    52. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "sendthemtothekitchen" tag-joke is an intentional historical throwback to irritate people such as yourself. Congratulations for falling for it. In short, good riddance.

    53. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Exactly, on the internet nobody knows you're a dog (or a boy!).

      Probably because nobody is questioning the fact that the majority of OSS developers are male (sometimes by loose definitions of the word). The issue here is the one that we are quick to call out in other situations: correlation is not causation.

      Just because there are relatively few women in OSS does not and cannot serve as proof that OSS developers as a community are sexist. If you're going to make that claim, you'll need better evidence than "only 1.5% of OSS developers are female" -- because that number in itself is attributable to a huge array of possible causes.

      This doesn't touch on the possibility that it may not be accurate- of the (tens? hundreds?) of thousands of developers, how many never mention their gender at all? So where, exactly, does 1.5% come from?

    54. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by ChameleonDave · · Score: 1

      The current leader of the Democratic Party in the US is a [...] socialist.

      Sorry, but nothing you ever write can ever have any credibility after that.

    55. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by azgard · · Score: 1

      Even if we consider the word "virgin" as being strictly female (which is not quite true in English, as opposed to for example my native tongue), it was basically a sarcastic parody on sexism in religion, which you obviously missed.

      Besides, I don't believe RMS is sexist. Look at his blog - he is _obsessed_ with human rights, democracy and equality. You are seeing things you want see.

    56. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      Either this little bit is about religion like all of the rest of it, or it's rape humor. And don't try to say "nobody brought up rape".

      Perhaps every mention of sex means rape to you. It doesn't bring up that image for me. Stop trying to put words in my mouth and polarise positions. I'm sure some people have found this was about rape, perhaps even you - I'm not among them. I admit this then gives you a convenient straw man to attack, but really.

      And "silly sexist remark"? Discrimination against half of humanity is hardly "silly". You seem to think "sexist" means "offends women with thin skin". It doesn't.

      Like most things in life, sexism comes in degrees ranging from silly to tragic.

      You're wrong with your idea of the facts about, well, everything here

      I note you haven't addressed the factual report of what he actually said, which I find telling.

    57. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Virak · · Score: 1

      Wow, just wow. I'm not even going to try to reply properly to this nonsense. You've ignored half my post, taken the rest out of context to grossly misrepresent what I've said, and then dared to say that *I* am the one attacking straw man arguments and not addressing things. I'm not sure if it's stupidity or malice but either way it's not worth the effort.

    58. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by Monsuco · · Score: 1

      Or, as another example, this story is tagged 'sendthemtothekitchen'. This sort of juvenile joke contributes to an atmosphere in which women do not feel welcome.

      Erm, would it be bad to add that I just tagged the story that because of your post?

    59. Re:How can sexism even be an issue in FOSS... by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      They claim Math was designed by men, for men, to exclude women by making it unappealing to them. This always strikes me as a horribly sexist opinion, but what do I know, with my primitive male brain.

      I think a recent article on the situation in philosophy explains it well (quite a few parallels between math and philosophy at the postgrad level): http://www.philosophypress.co.uk/?p=615

  6. GPL4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In order to use it, this software must have the affirmative action label attached to it.

  7. Feminist issues in software? by piotru · · Score: 2, Funny

    How wrong were I thinking that only professional matters should be of concern. Before we tackle the obvious sexist attitude in capitalist society towards childbearing, let me recall Sokal's discussions with postmodernist on mixing politics with science. Hope we aren't all living in Orwell's animal farm, just yet...

  8. Oh, my by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    I feel a Denis Leary rant coming on.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Oh, my by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      I'll tell Bill Hicks

    2. Re:Oh, my by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      I wish I had a link to a clip on youtube or something... There was an episode of Rescue Me, where they had to go to sensitivity training, and as a group went into a tirade about racism.... "It's okay, I'm a 'spic." was about my favorite line in that episode.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
  9. Well *DUH* by n3v · · Score: 1

    Girls are all about that cake - think Betty Crocker.

    If a girl is going to sit down and write some code I don't think she will be doing it for free =)

    PS - this is suppose to be FUNNY.

    1. Re:Well *DUH* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a guy and I like cake better than code. And I sure as hell don't code for free.

    2. Re:Well *DUH* by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I'm a guy, and I will code in exchange for cake, as long as the cake neither a lie, nor a made up drug. Also, no icing please.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Well *DUH* by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Does this need to be cake from a girl, or would cake from any reasonably competent baker suffice?

      How much Angel Cake for a horizontally scalable multi-threaded multi-client games server with incorporated physics engine? Or do I need to bid in slices of Battenburg for one of those?

    4. Re:Well *DUH* by kalirion · · Score: 1

      PS - this is suppose to be FUNNY.

      Well then, mission failed.

  10. For some, simply being a guy is sexism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And I suspect a vast majority of FOSS people are dudes with a heartbeat and would react like the same overblown charges of racism that get directed towards non-progressives with heartbeats.

    I think the male-female dynamic has much to argue over. In many areas there are cultural differences that keep women down and other areas where the natural differences of our mad ape ancestors merely express themselves in reality.

    Many charges of sexism are valid, but some are so ridiculous they deserve the ire they generate.

    1. Re:For some, simply being a guy is sexism by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 1

      hey dude are you being racist? cultural differences? some cultures just treat women like shit and if you dont like it or disagree then you arent open minded!

    2. Re:For some, simply being a guy is sexism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, like muslims or tucker max.

    3. Re:For some, simply being a guy is sexism by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      I also think that some people who throw around the terms "sexist" or "racist" either fail to realize or ignore how insulting those terms are when they are "surprised" at the reactions they get. In today's society, there are few worse insults from a defamation standpoint. You can be considered a liar, corrupt, incompetent, and generally and asshole, but if you're publicly racist/sexist you'll get kicked out of office.

  11. anti-feminist != sexist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That's assuming you can pin down a consistent definition of feminism.

    1. Re:anti-feminist != sexist by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Girls that go out there and "just take care of business" find feminism as annoying as any guy might.

      Quite often, you get the level of respect you earn. This can be true of old men that
      you would expect to be the biggest chauvinists due to how old they are and the sorts
      of ideas that were prevalent when they grew up. Even such anti-bellum sorts of
      gentlemen respect the talent independent of the external trappings.

      That said. Foot-in-mount disease must be fought wherever it is found.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:anti-feminist != sexist by ZarathustraDK · · Score: 2, Funny

      Picking feminism to counter male-chauvinism with is like siding with Stalin to fight Hitler. I wanna drop the F-bomb on both kinds.

      --
      If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
    3. Re:anti-feminist != sexist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite often, you get the level of respect you earn.

      That's the point. Sexism is when someone's sex (or sexual orientation) overrides in the observer's mind whatever achievement they made or could make. That's why it's an issue.

  12. Thou doth protest too much m'lady.. by Dharkfiber · · Score: 1

    out out damn spot?

  13. Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever heard of BitchX? How about etherape?

    1. Re:Here's two by e2d2 · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's EtherApe. But you knew that didn't you..

    2. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell with that, there's a pentest suite for python called brutal penetration

    3. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever heard of BitchX? How about etherape?

      BitchX is an IRC client and the word "Bitch" in the name refers to "Bitching" as in nagging, which is related to conversating which reflects back to IRC. It has nothing to do with women, since both men and women can bitch about something, and for a woman to think that it does makes her a self centred bitch -- this time in exactly the way she thinks.

    4. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is "therapist" is such a popular profession for women?

    5. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      BitchX is an IRC client and the word "Bitch" in the name refers to "Bitching" as in nagging, which is related to conversating which reflects back to IRC. It has nothing to do with women [...]

      You are aware that "bitching" is a sexist term referring to woman nagging their husbands I assume.

    6. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, except that guys can bitch too, so it is not a woman only term. That may be where it came from, but that is not what it means anymore. Kind of like the work actor vs actress. Actor used to be male and actress used to be female, but now the term actor means person who acts and has become gender neutral.

    7. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ladies, we ain't just talkin' 'bout you cause some of you niggas is bitches too" --Ice-mothafucken-T

    8. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is "therapist" is such a popular profession for women?

      Payback...

    9. Re:Here's two by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      You're a moron. About the 2nd week of boot camp, I was taught that "A bitching sailor is a happy sailor". We didn't have any women around - zero. We didn't even have female nurses - the corpsmen were all male. Bitching is a non-gender activity which we all engage in.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    10. Re:Here's two by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      a>Trashbat dot cock?
      b>It's registered in the Cook Islands.

    11. Re:Here's two by Tacvek · · Score: 2, Funny

      "A bitching sailor is a happy sailor"

      Is that bitching as in complaining, or as in "That's a bitchin' ride, bro."?

      --
      Stylish sheet to fix many problems in Slashdot's D3: https://gist.github.com/801524
    12. Re:Here's two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell with that, there's a pentest suite for python called brutal penetration

      Ah, but is that sexist or homophobic?

  14. I'll second the call for examples. by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No one is denying that there are idiots out there. Just browse at -1 here. You'll see every kind of comment for every kind of 'ism that you're looking for.

    But let's look are real EXAMPLES of real COMMENTS. Okay?

    And since we're talking about FOSS, we can look at the kernel mailing list. Hmmmmm, not a lot of sexist comments there. Particularly when taken as a percentage of total comments.

    So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

    1. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by fahrvergnugen · · Score: 5, Informative
      Are you seriously going to sit there and argue that open source is a sheer meritocracy with a straight face? Okay. Here are 4 examples:

      That's the result of a 5 minute google search.

      --
      Even Jesus hates listening to Creed.
    2. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by sohp · · Score: 1

      People have already forgotten Matt Aimonetti's talk "CouchDB + Ruby: Perform Like a Pr0n Star." at the Golden Gate Ruby Conference?

    3. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1, Troll

      Trying to figure out what you mean with that last sentence.. If I just translate it to another setting:

      " So, if only 1.% of the developers are negroid ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are racist ... what is the real "problem" that exists? "

      Imagine that rather than having a naked chick every so many slides (as happened in a talk @ GoCaRuCo), you would have a picture of a negroid in chains animation pulling in the next slide of the presentation. Add a whip to the scene and it would make even a mostly white audience severely uncomfortable.

      I think we're just far more sensitive to racism than to sexism, which makes it a bit harder to pick up acts of sexism.

    4. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by hedwards · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As opposed to the rest of the world where people get where they are by hard work and ingenuity.

      Yes, sexism exists, but it's not like feminists are saints either. Notice the shrinking portion of degrees earned by men in recent years, or how mysteriously benefits don't count as a part of the pay package when it's inconvenient to casting women as victims of oppression? Or how about the rather extreme form of censorship visited on people that point out that women are just as likely to be abusers as men.

      It's a tad hard to take people decrying sexism directed at women seriously when so often those accusations are used as a tool to further women's position at the expense of men's regardless of how the positions in a particular area were arrived at.

    5. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      Allow me to answer your question, with a question.

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    6. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      The problem is that a small group of women want to have an big influence in the world of OSS without actually contributing anything of note.

    7. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      how many comments are there per year per developer? 100? 1000?

      1 "sexist comment" per 15 women isn't bad. 100 per 15 women -- 6.6 per woman per year -- is pretty firmly in the ballpark of "sexist problem." Especially if we assume that the "sexist comments" are made about said female developers.

      You'd think a geek would understand scale, precision, and ratios.

    8. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      OSS because of the 1.9% number is pretty much a boys club, we often say things that we wouldn't say around women. This can result in some off colour words like the stallman comment. The 1st two are actually sexist and the last one is ... the feminist movement being overprotective (which i think is ok in this case). So two examples of real sexism.

      That said, OSS IS a sheer meritocracy. I don't or very rarely know the gender race or even political views of people I work with. And conversations rarely turn nearly as bad as thing you can hear at bars or clubs or school. Perhaps its because nerds don't get laid as often but we don't seem to parade it around when we do as if it would make us better people. The worst WORST thing I can think of is the 'there are no girls on the internet' joke meme. But I bet if you ask around I'm sure most guys will say there are far too few girls on the internet. And we'd be more than happy to have more.

      I think the media's representation of nerds does far FAR worse in deterring girls from FOSS than the actual nerd community ever could. As well a large % of us statistically have social issues, aspbergers and the like which make seeking out girls more difficult.

    9. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      I don't know why porn is considered sexist. Women are way more than half of the industry. Most of the ladies I know well enough to discuss that topic with enjoy a good, tastefully done porno flick.

      Sorry if this guy Matt stepped on your Good Christian Values (tm)

      And no, I couldn't actually find the presentation to read it thru all the hate the bloggers were spewing.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    10. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ChienAndalu · · Score: 5, Funny

      Just tell me which UNIX command you would use to get instructions on a program and deny that this isn't intentional.

    11. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      I don't see the Shuttleworth thing as being sexist. He referred to "our work in Linux" as being "hard to explain to girls", clearly there he's referring to girls that he meets in a social context, probably on dates. What's the big deal? He probably mostly meets men who are geeks and get it already, but meets lots of women who aren't and don't.

    12. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Add a whip to the scene and it would make even a mostly white audience severely uncomfortable.

      And being confronted with unsolicited, unexpected, and unwanted porn images every few slides in a technical presentation wouldn't make MALE viewers uncomfortable? I sense a bit of hypocricy here, when someone paints an entire gender as porn-loving women-haters but complains whenever any comments about women are made.

    13. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine you went to a conference and they had a presentation "Code like a sports star"

      And almost every picture was black or white. Wouldn't that make you feel inferior as a Samoan?

    14. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only there was a mechanism of acquiring examples... like RTFA...

      Examples: Stallman in Gran Canaria, Shuttleworth in Linuxcon (although in my opinion a bit overreacted upon)... No, I'm not going to google those for you.

    15. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Well, the real problem I have with sexism is that its definition has been expanded to include anything that points out a difference between genders, whether real or imagined.

      Men and women are different. Physically, physiologically, biologically and even logically! Men and women don't think the same ways. This is all proven science.

      The notion of sexism is practically sexism itself.

    16. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about Richard Stallman's completely bizarre behaviour at GCDS this year -- and his even more bizarre response (completely avoiding the key question -- twice!) to the complainer:

      http://opensourcetogo.blogspot.com/2009/07/emailing-richard-stallman.html
      http://www.osnews.com/story/21803
      http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/osrc/article.php/3830651/Richard-Stallman-Leadership-and-Sexism.htm (Slashdot got a mention here, ha ha ha)

      Possibly Stallman needs to revamp his Free Software Song to include his behaviour.

    17. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anghwyr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good point. Either would probably make me uncomfortable. And I'm male :).

      I tried to transpose the sexism to racism, as I thought that people would find it easier to pick up racism than sexism.

    18. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Jane_Dozey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I absolutely hate when women wave the flag of feminism when they're just being sexist asshats trying to get ahead of men. As a girl working in software development, it makes it all the harder to get accepted when male work colleagues are suspicious of my motives and being careful not to offend just in case I'm one of those idiots. I can't say I blame them either, it could ruin a mans career.

      As for those women, please don't give them any credit by calling them feminists. They're sexists and should be called out as such. Maybe then the rest of us can get on and get some proper work done. /rant

      --
      Silly rabbit
    19. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously going to sit there and argue that open source is a sheer meritocracy with a straight face? Okay. Here are 4 examples:

      That's the result of a 5 minute google search.

      I think the lack of female involvement in projects is actually the cause of the sexism, not the other way around.

      So maybe if more women actually bothered to get involved, it wouldn't be considered an all boys club and comments like these wouldn't be made.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    20. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Percentages are meaningless. Medgar Evers was murdered by only a small number of segregationists. While there may not have been many murderers among Mississippi segregationists time he was supported by many others both tacitly and explicitly including most shamefully the then governor of Mississippi. The point is that sexist comments and behavior need to be vigorously rejected by the FOSS leadership not just ignored as insignificant

    21. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by nametaken · · Score: 1

      I see... women in porn is the same as putting a black man in chains and using him as a beast of labor?

      There might be a minor fucking gap in this logic.

    22. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by xero314 · · Score: 1

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      You wasted way to much time on your sensitization process.

      Oh and the strawberries really don't care how much feces is in your cake, and neither does the rest of the cake.

      The end user might, but interesting as the may be, it shows that your analogy is useless, as the end user of software does not care how many sexist comments where made by the developers, only that it works.

    23. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ckedge · · Score: 1

      Are you saying we have to run up and down the streets screaming about something and creating action plans because it's not 100.000000% perfect?

      I dispute the usefulness of your action plan. Or... your innuendo... or whatever it is you are doing.

      btw - you do realize that a non-negligible portion of everything is actually feces, right?

    24. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by jopsen · · Score: 1

      Accusing someone of sexism is a serious matter... And from where I'm standing most of the links you provide are just jokes, funny twists or figures of speech... And yeah, on a cloudy day someone might find them offensive...
      But I don't see any major distros shipping with semi naked women on the wallpaper, such wallpapers isn't even dominating on sites like gnome-look etc... As opposed to non-FOSS related wallpaper sites...

      Yes, it might be slightly political incorrect at times... but so is Microsoft bashing, nevertheless we all want to bash and call them evil at any opportunity that springs to mind :)

      Note: Any parallel this post may draw between female humans and Microsoft is completely unintentional (I'm not a sexist).

    25. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by mi · · Score: 1

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      So, in your opinion, a sexist contributes zero to the cake, whatever their accomplishments on behalf of the project(s)? Because comparing him to "feces" you've implied exactly that... Take one "sexist" quote from Stallman, and it is as if the GNU-project (the "cake") is completely ruined?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    26. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by GryMor · · Score: 1

      Comments per year per developer? I would guess that the mode is likely 0, median may also be 0 (that is, the majority of contributors are silent in actual FOSS forums).

      I don't see how the metric of sexist comments per female contributor per year is in anyway meaningful. It seems like, in order to specify that FOSS has a sexism problem (as opposed to having a few members, who may be generally blacklisted, that have a sexism problem), you would need to show that the prevalence of sexism was higher than in society. If the (un-sourced, and AFAICT, unsupported) rates of 0.1% in FOSS and 2% in society are accurate, then it would actually show that FOSS had a prevalence of sexist content around 1/20th of society as a whole.

      This should in no way be construed as a limitation on the condemnation of individual sexist remarks, comments and/or materials, merely as an indication that ire at characterizing FOSS as a community as having a problem may be legitimate (IFF the numbers are anywhere near those thrown around in the comments of this article, something I do not claim and have no means of supporting).

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    27. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by tecnico.hitos · · Score: 1

      I don't know, but I would expect if a crowd was made mostly of women, they would too make sexist jokes, just feminist ones.

      Since FOSS is open to voluntaries is not men's fault if they are the great majority. Most sexist jokes tend to be inadequate anyways, regardless of sex, and are at least completely off-topic in a developer conference. Even so it is not an unexpected behavior.

      --
      The good, the evil and the vacuum tubes.
    28. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      Its' not about porn vs slavery, which would be a poor comparison indeed.

      It is about putting offending pictures to a particular group of people in your presentation, and I picked a stronger example on purpose to try (and fail to) show Khasim that frequency of nasty comments in a mailinglist isn't all that matters.

    29. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Feminism has turned into a bitch movement. Women have equal rights pretty much, they need defending and the occasional tweak, I don't believe there is such a gap that there needs to be a movement any more.

      That said if anyone asks I tell them I'm an equalist NOT a feminist. The goal of feminism is to get women more rights which is at its root sexist. Equalists fight for equality which basically everyone can stand behind comfortably.

    30. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Why don't you just ditch the "feminist" title for any of it?

      These days, the term "feminist" has come correlated with this sort of thinking and actions that everyone considers deplorable- but give the feminist the out because we're all about giving women "equal" rights and they've obviously been oppressed by men all these years.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    31. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Krahar · · Score: 1

      Indeed, most people are more sensitive to slavery and people being whipped/tortured than we are with a man telling a joke about women... is this disturbing to you?

    32. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ojustgiveitup · · Score: 1

      How come nobody has given this lady a staunch "Hear hear!" yet? Is it because all the men are afraid it will ruin their careers?? In any case, "Hear hear!"

    33. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      women are just as likely to be abusers as men

      Source?

      so often those accusations are used as a tool to further women's position at the expense of men's

      Has this ever actually happened in the FOSS community? How?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    34. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      Not particularly disturbing. But I think that the current sensitivity to one thing or another isn't an objective reflection of how wrong something is.

      Your statement just reminded me of an old joke about women, which touches upon slavery as well.

      "What's wrong when you wife comes out of the kitchen and starts nagging you? You made the chain too long."

    35. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by raddan · · Score: 1

      Interesting point, and it brings up something I've been thinking about in the back of my mind for a long time. When is a feminist simply sexist? When are advocates for affirmative action simply racist? I am, admittedly, not terribly familiar with each group's philosophy or literature, but it seems to me that when one goes past "raising awareness" and "eliminating discrimination" to "actively trying to disadvantage another group", one is just as bad as the problem they're decrying.

      As you point out, these tactics don't actually solve the problem. They make them worse for people who play fair. What is truly unfortunate is that you might actually have a better chance at getting ahead if you, too, became a "sexist asshat". The pressure is toward NOT doing the right thing.

    36. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by 3247 · · Score: 1

      I think the lack of female involvement in projects is actually the cause of the sexism, not the other way around. [] So maybe if more women actually bothered to get involved, it wouldn't be considered an all boys club and comments like these wouldn't be made.

      Most likely it's a feedback loop: Few women lead to few women.

      A few sexist remarks are a much smaller problem than a society that discourages women in subtle ways.

      --
      Claus
    37. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by tyler_larson · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously going to sit there and argue that open source is a sheer meritocracy with a straight face? Okay. Here are 4 examples:

      These aren't examples of discrimination, these are examples of people making comments you find offensive. I don't think anyone argues that OSS is a "sheer meritocracy" -- there's far too much politics and ego-stroking for that to be the case. However, one consideration that is never actually considered is gender.

      Have you ever been denied SVN commit access because you're a girl? Has your memory management patch been rejected because you weren't a man? Has anyone refused to explain to you the difference between covariance and contravariance because it's a "boys only" secret?

      Be prepared to be offended. OSS has a "hobby" feel to it for most people, and as such there's an informality that makes people feel that they can let go of the business-like social inhibitions that are so often in place to prevent offending the sensibilities of the separate cultures that make up an audience. You get it unfiltered, and you might not like what makes it through.

      Yours isn't the only culture that gets lampooned; it's just the only one you care about. If you were a deeply religious person, for example, you may be severely offended by the irreverent treatment of what you hold so dear by the proselyting atheists who make up a disproportionate amount of the community. And there are many other examples.

      But if you have real examples of actual discrimination, of opportunities denied because of your gender, then there is a real problem that needs examination. However, if you're just offended, well then hello and welcome to the Internet.

      --
      "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. However, this is not necessarily a good idea...."
      RFC 1925
    38. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Snodgrass · · Score: 1

      From within emacs or from the command line? (it's m-x woman in emacs)

    39. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by cthulu_mt · · Score: 1

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      Nothing according to the FDA.

      --
      Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
    40. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by theelectron · · Score: 1

      I would sincerely like to thank you for your compassion of my position as a male, and would like to apologize to the women that I may have tried to hard to be non-offensive around because I am too afraid of the one who will call me out as sexist when no such intent is meant.

    41. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      info?

    42. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think that's fun, try joining a rape survivors group as a man. The responses are:

      A) they'll call the cops
      B) they'll deny men can be raped at all
      C) they'll admit men can rape men, but continue to deny that men can be raped by women
      D) they'll admit that perhaps a man could be raped by a women, but men enjoy sex therefore they can't suffer trauma from it.

      Oddly, it's the last that bugs me the most.

    43. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Krahar · · Score: 1

      Your statement just reminded me of a joke about men, which touches upon slavery as well.

      "What do you call a handcuffed man? Trustworthy."

      OK, so I just found that on the internet. Still, it occurs to me that I don't remember ever hearing a man make a joke about women in real life, but I have heard women make jokes about men. The thing is, one is acceptable and the other is not. Isn't that funny?

    44. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      Why don't you just ditch the "feminist" title for any of it?

      These days, the term "feminist" has come correlated with this sort of thinking and actions that everyone considers deplorable- but give the feminist the out because we're all about giving women "equal" rights and they've obviously been oppressed by men all these years.

      Why don't we stop using the title "open source" since Microsoft has hijacked the term with their conflated licenses?

      Why don't we stop using the terms conservative and liberal, since the Republicans and Democrats have hijacked those?

      Why don't we just stop riding airplanes, because some terrorists blew a few up?

      Why don't we just give in, whenever it's more convenient for others who aren't invested in the issue?

      Take back the word. Take back your life. Quit letting others' feelings dictate how you express yourself.

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    45. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me question your question with a question. Can he have his cake and eat it too?

    46. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      I was about to say ...

      There is a large difference between a 'feminist' and an 'uppity sexist bitch', but I think you did it much more elegantly.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    47. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are absolutely right homes, it is intentional.

      Only you attribute it to the wrong thing. It is not sexism, rather something called LAZINESS! Which, last I checked anyways, was the primary motivation in 95% of every action taken by a UNIX admin. Hence every single command being either just enough keystrokes to make it unique or an acronym...

    48. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just tell me which UNIX command you would use to get instructions on a program and deny that this isn't intentional.

      $ man women
      No manual entry for women

    49. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      Well, the GNU people lead an oncoming battle against this element of sexism by trying to replace it with a politically-correct, gender-neutral command 'info'.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    50. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The issue here isn't necessarily porn, but the context. That was a professional setting where the whole topic of porn should never have come up, much less slides with suggestive pictures and words not allowed at work. "Perform like a Pr0n Star" is an amazingly sophomoric title for a talk, something that would not at all be tolerated in the work place. It goes a long ways towards giving Ruby on Rails a fratboy-like stereotype.

    51. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by evanbd · · Score: 1

      Just tell me which UNIX command you would use to get instructions on a program and deny that this isn't intentional.

      $info info

      Nope, not sexist.

    52. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are saying is that *all* female developers are fragrant tasty strawberry's and all male developers are shit tainted sponge cake. Yeah that is not sexist, not at all.

    53. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Sounds more unprofessional than sexist. Guess the GGP brought up a shitty example then?

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    54. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      I wish everyone thought more like you did

    55. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      These days, the term "feminist" has come correlated with this sort of thinking and actions that everyone considers deplorable-

      Is this like how the term "liberal" became correlated with latte drinkers?

      Admittedly, feminism has lost much of impetus in recent years. The most flagrant examples of discriminations against women have more or less ended in the developed world. Women are more educated, prosperous, independent and politically active than at any time in history. The movement has entered an era of diminishing returns.

      But that doesn't mean that feminism has become an outdated concept, like suffragism or abolitionism. There are still many issues and problems that women face in our society and feminists are still helping women help themselves. These issues may not be as urgent as voting rights or working rights, but they do exist and are in need of attention.

      There seems to be an American stereotype of the angry feminist; caustic, man-hating and anti-sex. This creature is as much a product of the media as of reality, if she exists at all. And moreover, she accomplished little and less. The feminists who organised, marched, campaigned and petitioned for change are the ones who actually managed to make a real difference, though they never got as much airtime. People like Mary Robinson, who fought for Irish women's rights for years, and went on to become the President of the whole country, and probably the best President it ever had.

      Unfortunately, like the term "liberal", the modern, predominantly American, media has made the term "feminist" synonymous with this radical image. Check out this LA Times article from 1991 in which Robinson is described as a "radical feminist". I cannot muster the words to begin to describe just how asinine this description was. That was almost 20 years ago. I imagine perceptions have become even more warped since then.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    56. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by D+Ninja · · Score: 1

      And since we're talking about FOSS, we can look at the kernel femailing list.

      Fixed that for you so your post is not sexist.

    57. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by D+Ninja · · Score: 3, Funny

      [W]hat is the real problem with your cake?

      The cake is a lie?

    58. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    59. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      I think there's a good explanation why it doesn't work both ways (one being acceptable, and the other not).

      Women gained the right to vote as late as 1920 in the USA, and were seen as worth less than man for god knows how many years. That sort of leaves a mark.. and makes jokes about it a more sensitive issue than the other way around.

      And I've heard and made plenty of jokes about women, but not so much the other way around. Might be because I'm a boy, and spend quite some time in a fraternity.

    60. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nothing?

    61. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by steelfood · · Score: 1

      A double standard exists. There's no denying that. The same thing exists with racism as well, so it's not just discrimination based on sex.

      The thing that complicates sexism and muddles the whole affair is that there actually are (scientifically demonstrated, if I may add) physical differences between men and women. Suddenly, what is legitmately discriminatory and what is not isn't so clear cut anymore.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    62. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that you're a horrible cook?

    63. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Uipe · · Score: 1

      /bow!

    64. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by smisle · · Score: 1

      I don't know, but I would expect if a crowd was made mostly of women, they would too make sexist jokes, just feminist ones.

      yeah ... except that we don't. (not the ladies I hang with anyway)

      Anyway, it's not SO much the original comments that make *me* angry, it's the idiots that come out of the woodwork denying the fact that there ever could be a problem.

      Does anyone know where the 1.5% of FOSS devs are women number comes from? I guess GNU makes people sign papers, so you can't really hide behind a persona, which is what i would do if I were to seriously contribute.

      --
      I'm not a bird, I'm a super-advanced flying stealth dinosaur!
    65. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Stallman refers to EMACS virgins, specifically "women who had not been introduced to EMACS" along with the advice that "relieving them of their virginity" was some sort of sacred duty for members of "The Church of EMACS".

      Well, you know RMS. He's a shining beacon in the FOSS world. A bit like lighthouse really, something that if you venture too near of it, you'll get shipwrecked in underwater rocks, yet something that helps you to find your way... ;-)

    66. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      The result is the same. You didn't know the feces was there, had no means of ever noticing that it was there, and were eating the cake without issue before. Now that you know that some minute amount is present, you're making an issue of it.

      It isn't as if you just couldn't figure out what was wrong with the cake and went looking. No, you ate that feces-cake with a smile and went away full.

      Only NOW do you have an issue with it, and only because someone went to extremes to demonstrate that it was there.

      I prefer to first deal with the real issues. Cakes frosted with feces, perhaps.

    67. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      We used to use woman-uals, but ... oh wait, this is about not being sexist. Nevermind.

    68. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      info(1).

      Of course I deny that this isn't intentional. It's definitely intentional.

    69. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by dissy · · Score: 1

      Just tell me which UNIX command you would use to get instructions on a program and deny that this isn't intentional.

      The one that stands for manual?

      Personally I have never heard of a womanual...
      Although apparently Google has! Learn something new every day.

      Besides, any true hacker doesn't read the manual, they read the source :P

    70. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by brianez21 · · Score: 1

      info

      --
      kernel: lp0 on fire
    71. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Bryan3000000 · · Score: 1

      So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      Allow me to answer your question, with a question.

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      Since that's almost certainly well within the fecal contamination limits allowed by the FDA... Maybe there's not enough strawberries?

    72. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Ummm.. Troll slashdot at -1, and see how many "OMG, A GIRL READS SLASHDOT" posts are there after a gender identifying post, or "OMG, A MARRIED GEEK"... It kinda embarrasses me to see so many who define the stereotype of the geek.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    73. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      That said if anyone asks I tell them I'm an equalist NOT a feminist. The goal of feminism is to get women more rights which is at its root sexist.

      I have to respectfully disagree with you there. It's not that feminists are trying to get more rights than men, it's that they're trying to get them more rights than they currently have. Totally different.

      Actually I would say the issue today is about achieving practical rights ... equal rights are "on the books" sure enough but it doesn't mean a whole lot. How come women as a population still own so little wealth compared to men, home come rape and domestic violence are so common, how come there are so few women in high government office, why is it still headline news when a woman wins a Nobel Prize? We're talking about ~50% of the population for crying out loud.

      Sure, there are feminists-separatists and man-haters out there but feminism, to many, is about empowerment rather than about acrimony. I believe it's possible to be a feminist and an equalist at the same time. It depends on what books you read, I guess.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    74. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh that's great. The anger men cannot express you do and go on to the real issue. Getting work done. I love it.

      irony: my captcha is flamed

    75. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make an excellent point. I don't want to defend people who intentionally make sexist/belittling comments- but I think that most of these examples people have put forth are comments from people who just didn't think it through- or meant it differently than the way some have interpreted it. I seriously doubt most of the people in the FOSS community would have made statements with a malicious intent. Certainly certain segments of society are more likely to make such intentionally belittling statements- I just don't think this one is more so than others. In that respect I wonder if the problem is really that big. I may just be missing it as a guy. Do we really need to be THAT careful about the words that come out of our mouth? I certainly wouldn't intentionally make such demeaning statements. The question is how do you rephrase things to not belittle woman. How should Shuttleworth have said ( something like this)"woman are hard to explain stuff to" without it being demeaning? I don't think most people saw that as demeaning-but maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it would have been best to have said "I find it hard to explain what I do to woman". The intention is from his experience he hasn't found it easy to explain to woman. It is generalizing- but something we do every day and is extremely hard to avoid without drawn out conversations we don't have time for. This statement may be very true too- but in no way describes all woman. Just all or most woman Shuttleworth has encountered. Conclusion? Do we FOSS people need to be more consciousness of what we say? Maybe-but I suspect allot of the reason woman aren't participating has nothing to do with the FOSS community's male participants comments. People who are FOSS people are too dedicated to let something like a little sexism stop them. I participated in a FOSS community with significant religious population participated. Comments offended me plenty of times by those participants. I certainly didn't leave over it-and I doubt most other FOSS supporters would either even when you are offended.

    76. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Kozz · · Score: 1

      Allow me to answer your question, with a question.

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      To quote Adam Savage of Mythbusters, "There's poo everywhere!!"

      --
      I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
    77. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      I would be willing to bet that .1% of most cake does consist of rodent and insect feces.
      So, nothing is wrong with my cake, it's got the same amount of shit in it as everyone elses cake.

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    78. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by tilandal · · Score: 1

      Its sexist because the presentation was specifically catered to appeal to men. It would be less sexist but equally offensive if he had slides with scantly clad, well endowed men as well as the slides of women.

    79. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Dave+Emami · · Score: 1

      Just tell me which UNIX command you would use to get instructions on a program and deny that this isn't intentional.

      That's fixed. See: http://laughnet.net/politically-correct-unix-p-172.html

      --

      "The Greens lynched a hacker in Chicago. Last month, but I think the body's still hanging from the old Water Tower."
    80. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is intentional. You can rely on it to give you the same answer every time.

    81. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by IICV · · Score: 1

      Feces in your cake? It's more likely than you think.

    82. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are always people being assholes to each other. The only difference I see is what topic or issue drives them to be an asshole. This particular segment of feminism is using gender issues as their hot button reason, and I completely agree with your assessment of this segment of people (as much as I hate to say it, my mother falls into this segment). They are driving a wedge into the debate, and hurting both sides in the process (and no, sexist men are really no better). You see the same thing with race issues too... there are idiots on both sides of any big issue that make it harder for those of us who are perfectly happy to find compromise or common ground to find each other and more importantly, listen to each other in earnest when we do find each other.

      I look at the policies of the company I work for, and that parental leave in the case of a baby is extended to both men and women... and I applaud this. As a man, I don't like the idea of not being able to be around in those all-important weeks after the baby's birth, while the mother is allowed leave. All it does is not only enforce gender stereotypes by extending to one parent and not the other, as well as denying the father the opportunity to be there for his significant other after the birth, and to take part in care of the baby.

    83. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For most FOSS developers, all other developers are equally stupid. The difference is that when you insult a man it is just an insult, when you insult a woman it is sexism.

    84. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      Allow me to answer your question, with a question.

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      If I understand the argument the problem is the giant penis sticking out of the cake with eat me written on it

    85. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1

      Like the idiotic dog crap brownies story, you're making an irrational, emotional argument. Your only cleverness is being emotionally manipulative to try and convince people to stop rationally thinking and agree with you blindly.

      There are human beings who suck. They're racist, sexist, classist, ablist, and a host of other ists. We can work over generations to change people's minds so that people appreciate that sexism is wrong on a gut level. But we're not going to entirely wipe it out in our lifetimes. There is going to be background sexism. The goal is to get that background level low enough that we can, by and large, cope and move on. Perhaps 0.1% isn't low enough, but the point is reasonable: there is an acceptable level. There has to be, because the other option is to spend all of our resources uselessly pursuing the impossible.

      Me, I'm open to about 0.0002% of my cake being feces. It's a common FDA standard for "excreta" in a variety of foodstuffs.

      I am curious about the equivalence of women developers and strawberries. I certainly wouldn't want a cake that was 50% strawberries as at some point it stops being cake. Should I infer that we want to keep women to maybe 5-10% of the development community?

    86. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by LordAndrewSama · · Score: 1

      That's because men are quick and concise in explanations so that there's less noise while the game is on, hence why a grunt is all the communication needed, women talk for so long you forget what was being discussed. Take this thread for example, it was something about FOSS.....

      *hides*

    87. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      I certainly wouldn't want a cake that was 50% strawberries as at some point it stops being cake. Should I infer that we want to keep women to maybe 5-10% of the development community?

      We could maybe handle 20% if we ground them up and mixed them in really well. OTH, they would probably be better off with a sickenly sweet syrup and some horses (hooves) as a pie. But girls are bad at math, so they can't be pie, they have to be cake.

      But then, they can be "sweetie pie" ...

    88. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      "have to respectfully disagree with you there. It's not that feminists are trying to get more rights than men, it's that they're trying to get them more rights than they currently have. Totally different."
      "The goal of feminism is to get women more rights"

      Sounds like we are in agreement...I think that the goal of a feminism promoting women is sexist. If you cared about equality your fight wouldn't be for women it would be for equality generally. A good example is in Canada when women were granted the right to voted the feminist movement celebrated as would I. But Nellie McClung pushed that men should have the right to vote. Which is fully in line with feminism but clearly opposed to Equalism.

      A lot of the issues you listed are cultural and suck and we will keep working towards fixing these issues, I think/hope they will get better with time. BTW women win the nobel prize all the time and its nothing special at all, maybe you are thinking of 20years ago.

      I don't think all feminists are bad but I think it lends itself to abuse whereas stating that you are an equalist does not.

    89. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yay! Someone points out that this "statistical" argument going around is meaningless. It is comparing apples and oranges. I agree with the sentiment expressed by the parent. I was surprised that it was modded funny.

    90. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Thanks, like I said, I couldn't find the damn thing to see for myself.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    91. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Proof by analogy is fraud.

    92. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      This is about code, and there are no scientifically demonstrated differences that have to do with mental capabilities - what we see is people who statistically deviate over time, and lots of cultural influences that may explain why a number of other countries with no obvious relationship (unless you're telling me the swedes and thais are together a separate species) don't show these differences. Also, these physical differences are close to minimal when you look at studies done about some hunter gatherer groups in the natural habitat of humanity (large plains), besides reproductive dimorphism, and there again, you see girls being discouraged from sports and other stuff... And it's not universal and it shows.

      I will preempt any further bullshit, half of my degree was physical anthropology related.

    93. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by trajanus22 · · Score: 1

      Wait, there's -1 comments?! Man, and I thought the threes were bad. . .

    94. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.living-foods.com/articles/cacao.html
      "every time you eat a chocolate bar, it may contain a rodent hair and 16 insect parts and still carry the blessing of the FDA., and For chocolate powder or cakes there must not be more than 75 insect fragments in three tablespoons of powder., and Four percent of cacao beans may be infested by insects. Animal excreta (such as visible rat droppings) must not exceed 10 milligrams per pound."

      It is about .0022% of feces in your chocolate, assuming you are eating a chocolate cake. So to be FDA approved .01% IS too much sexism.

    95. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by mjwx · · Score: 1

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      Just make sure it's listed as "Flavour enhancer (5563)" on the list of ingredients and you'll be OK. As a side note, 2% of chocolate is Cockroach, you just cant keep them out of the beans. There is also a percentage of Cockroach in Coffee as well for the same reason.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    96. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by the_womble · · Score: 1

      If anyone who finds any but the first offensive needs to get things in perspective.

      The last is in somewhat bad taste, but not really offensive.

      The second makes a valid point in a way that probably accurately reflects his own experience and that of the majority of his audience.

      The Drupal Paris thing hardly seems worth bothering over. Some people do "sample" the opposite sex, and you need to pick one sex to make the concept work.

      If those are the best examples you can find, I think you just proved a lack of sexism.

    97. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by the_womble · · Score: 1

      It would help a lot if more women said that, louder.

      We also need to do something about discrimination against men in traditionally female roles, whether work (nurses, for example) or in private life (childcare - see this article:

    98. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And that's exactly the problem - it's NOT 0.1% of your cake being faeces. It's one cake in 1000 having a trace of shit, and 999 being completely good. *Very* different things - by characterising the issue as the first rather than the second, you're saying all FOSS is tainted, instead of there just being a couple of bad apples.

    99. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 1

      Thanks for being sensible. :)

      Being male in today's world is not always easy. Being a fairly virile person myself I've always felt males get very mixed messages when many women tend to dress very sexily at work, and yet it's more or less forbidden to mention it.

      Most people can joke about this stuff and most women will take a compliment like "nice top" like to compliment it is. But there are always the select few women who will feel 'violated' because of something like that, just as there are the select few men who abuse women by uninvited slaps on the rear and equivalent things.

      I wish people could just accept that we're all just human, and if everyone just worked on getting along instead of freaking out on pointless issues we'd all be better off and have more resources to attack real issues.

      But it's nice to see that there are more sensible women out there than just the one I was crazy enough to marry. :)

      --
      .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    100. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you!!!
      I've been waiting to see that comment come from a woman.
      The "Politically Correct" in New Zealand seem to out on
      a vengeance path sometimes and men can't say a thing
      about it.

      It hurts me to see sexism in either direction.

    101. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >what is the real problem with your cake?

      The 0.1% is the problem. Not the whole cake !

      Anyway FOSS is not a whole and there is no such thing as a community. I'm not responsible for the acts of others.

    102. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Total+Cult · · Score: 1

      If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

      Nothing according to the FDA.

      So if you had a cake 30cm x 30cm x 10cm the FDA would let you have nine whole cubic centimetres of it be crap?

    103. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by skeeto · · Score: 1

      The RMS one wasn't a sexist comment. It was a parody of religion. The people accusing him of sexism just didn't get the joke. It's like accusing Dave Chappelle of racism.

      The Ruby on Rails thing though, that's a perfect example of geek sexism at it's worst.

    104. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by sac13 · · Score: 1

      • Stallman refers to EMACS virgins, specifically "women who had not been introduced to EMACS" along with the advice that "relieving them of their virginity" was some sort of sacred duty for members of "The Church of EMACS".

      As a vi user, I too find this terribly offensive...

    105. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by S.P.Zeidler · · Score: 1

      right, especially as the last is something that gets thrown at female rape victims often enough, too. Best I can come up with as excuse is that the trauma interferes with their thinking.

      OTOH, I do understand that a rape victim may need time away from perceived threat, and since rapists don't come with a label on their forehead and a lot of rape is being done by men that the victim knew well and trusted before, distrust of anyone having the equipment is understandable. Separate help groups may be more helpful.

    106. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with you here. The influence of sexism is not just about discrimination. You don't have to actively discriminate against women to drive them out of FOSS. When there's a 99% male population (not uncommon on many projects) every single comment is enough to make a woman feel unwelcome. More importantly, with that many men around, you'll always find plenty who just don't see the problem. So it happens that in a lot of instances like this, the guy in question doesn't get called out by others. The end result is that it seems to any casual observer to be okay to hate on women in general and on their technical skills in particular.

      Now there are projects that are particularly welcome to newcomers and projects that are not. But when women can't find any projects where they can feel welcome, we have a problem. When they feel compelled to start their own women's groups because they feel slighted against in the main population, there is a problem. All the flamebait in this thread and the summary notwhitstanding, this is a real problem that goes beyond simple discrimination.

      BTW, I agree with the above poster that Mark Shuttleworth's comments had nothing to do with sexism as such. They were just taken out of context and then misinterpreted. But if you don't see anything wrong with the RoR presentation, then I think some introspection really is in order. Martin fowler did a great post exploring the issues surrounding it and explains it a lot better than I can, as usual.

    107. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please provide the data and methodology for your study determining that 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist.

      Which lists? What is the membership? What is the ratio of female to male participant? What criteria did you use to identify which comments were or were not sexist?

      Or did you just make up a percentage that made you feel better and supported your baseless opinion?

    108. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by Xifeng · · Score: 1

      He probably mostly meets men who are geeks and get it already, but meets lots of women who aren't and don't.

      But that's exactly the point. Why is it that you automatically assume that women are weaker technologically? Institutionalized sexism.

    109. Re:I'll second the call for examples. by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      But that's exactly the point. Why is it that you automatically assume that women are weaker technologically? Institutionalized sexism.

      Why is it that you assume that I assume that?

  15. Note to Author: by eln · · Score: 2, Funny

    Pretending to be a crusader for the feminist cause on the Internet will not make you anymore likely to get laid. Not even net sex. Sorry to disappoint.

    1. Re:Note to Author: by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 1

      finally, someone says it. more people need to get this through their heads. its like the twisted idea that white knighting women clicks with feminism and somehow it will all end in sex and true love

    2. Re:Note to Author: by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, because any attempt to do anything positive that somehow relates to women is merely a desperate attempt to get laid. *rolleyes* From my experience, you're merely betraying your own attitude - that when you take a stance that somehow benefits women, it is to merely to get laid.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Note to Author: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The meaning of life is simple. You are here to propagate. In-order to do that you must have sex. If sex is not on your mind a relatively large portion of the time and is not playing a significant role in your choices and actions, "YOU'RE DOING IT WRONG"

      The first thought that goes through my mind when I see a woman is would I like to put my penis in her.

      The second is what can I do to make that happen.

    4. Re:Note to Author: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because any attempt to do anything positive that somehow relates to women is merely a desperate attempt to get laid. *rolleyes*

      It is. Always.

    5. Re:Note to Author: by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 1

      hey AC have I made you cry recently, by any chance, under your real username? sorry about that, I like to rip apart the dumb fucks on this site with my excellent karma and clear worldview so yeah, sorry about that but thanks for the anonymous love

    6. Re:Note to Author: by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Darwin called, he wants morons to stop misinterpreting his theories.

  16. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Toonol · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It just seems that now adays everything is completely overblown. I think that a huge majority of men in this country aren't sexist or racist, I think they just want to get to the end of the work day.

    I think that the near-complete elimination of sexism and racism (which has been accomplished) is prompting many people to become even louder in their accusations of sexism and racism. If fighting discrimination is your raison d'etre, you may not WANT it to end; even if only on a subconscious level, you will seek out ever more and more slight examples of it, and make ever more and more shrill noise about it.

  17. TLDR by Reason58 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How can someone speak out against generalizations made towards an entire group of people (women), while at the same time condemning an entire group of people (FOSS)?

    If you would like to see individuals judged on their own merits then stop trying to link behaviors with groups of people. It makes your argument look flawed.

    1. Re:TLDR by Intron · · Score: 1

      Insightful ^^

      Not only did the author essentially paint all of FOSS as sexist, but also gave no evidence. If sexism is as widespread as claimed, why not give some examples? Is it just the use of "he" in documents? Are women being paid less for free code?

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    2. Re:TLDR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever use man! It clearly is a sexist jibe at implying only men have knowledge of how to do thing!

    3. Re:TLDR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Also, make sure not to call Nazi Germany racist, because there were many people in Germany who were not racist.

      I agree that this article is BS, but your point is just as stupid.

    4. Re:TLDR by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Because he's talking about institutional sexism, which of necessity is a property of cultures (including geek/hacker culture).

      See e.g. here.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    5. Re:TLDR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the premises of the argument is that the average man is an anti-feminist who wants to deny the importance of feminist issues.

      Heh... One of the premises to the argument is slightly different than that.

      To invalidate their claims is to invalidate what they feel.

      Invalidating what they feel invalidates them. You deny what they feel to be right and important. If you invalidate them, you must be a misogynistic pig. Or arguing for the sake of arguing. Or mean...I've had that thrown at me before.

      If you feel/think that this isn't accurate, just look at how they respond to actual facts being placed before their feet. They typically get very hostile, very quick and accuse you of being in denial (never mind that you just imploded their assertion with a ton of verifiable facts that prove the opposite of what they claim to be true- often without adequate backing...).

      In the end, they're about feelings. How they feel about something. What does that tell you about them? It tells me volumes and I don't typically give them the time of day because you won't convince them and they'll tend to be very unhealthy for you to keep around.

    6. Re:TLDR by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is the lazy programmers way of writing "manual" as in "Go read the manual."

    7. Re:TLDR by foqn1bo · · Score: 1

      I don't know, TLDR, maybe you should RTFA and find out.

    8. Re:TLDR by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1

      Are women being paid less for free code?

      Yes. In fact, I have it on very good authority that they typically are only paid half as much.

  18. Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can I have my 20 seconds back?

  19. An example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Here's an example of how you appear to show your feminism by how another person appeared to me when "being sensitive".

    Talking about "The Accused". One girl and she says "A friend of mine felt ashamed of being a man after watching that".

    My IMMEDIATE thought was "What? Did he get a boner in the rape scene?"

    My second thought was "He said that hoping to get a 'sensitivity' shag".

    People accept feminine problems exist.

    And they don't assume women don't understand stuff "because you're a girl".

    But then YOU come along and try to make us feel guilty about how other people treat women.

    And that pisses people off.

    We have enough we HAVE done in our lives to be ashamed of without someone trying to get us to shoulder stuff we didn't do.

    1. Re:An example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My IMMEDIATE thought was "What? Did he get a boner in the rape scene?"

      I did. Jodie Foster's rock hard nipple, what's not to love about that?

  20. MMO? by lymond01 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I have been abused in every way possible — being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

    Gosh...this totally happened to me too on the original Everquest forums. And they never did fix paladins!

  21. What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Indeed. I have known several women who write open source software, and (admittedly from the outside) I didn't see them treated any differently on mailing lists and in meetings than men. Yes, there's an imbalance, yes, there may be institutional sexism... but what's the source?

    Bruce argues that proprietary software has a higher proportion of women. The thing is, proprietary software has a bigger payback for the actual developer... and it's a payback that is valuable for everyone: MONEY. It's a relatively well paid trade that women are at no great disadvantage in. Most people working on proprietary software ... men or women ... don't program in their spare time, either. It's a job, not a hobby.

    For most developers, open source software is a hobby. A valuable one, yes, but I would suspect that "fewer than 1.5%" of open source developers actually have that in their primary job description. What are the proportions of women involved in other technical hobbies? It's my impression that the answer is "pretty low", and a bit of googling tends to support that. So... what's the reason why women aren't involved in things like model railroading ("I haven't met too many women modelers" -- mary Miller, MMR)? I suspect that's where you need to look to dig up the answer to this question.

    1. Re:What Are the Reasons? by netruner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe I'm making my self a target for ageism, but aren't a lot of FOSS activities typically conducted by your handle (i.e. not your name)? How could anyone know your gender with any certainty? I suppose someone could say that a person's choice of a handle speaks to their gender, but I've seen quite a few people who manipulate others by intentionally choosing a misleading handle.

      --



      DISCLAIMER: This post was not checked for speling and grammar- if you complain- you're a whiner
    2. Re:What Are the Reasons? by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      For most developers, open source software is a hobby. A valuable one, yes, but I would suspect that "fewer than 1.5%" of open source developers actually have that in their primary job description.

      Well, speaking for Linux, at least, Baloney. Not just a lot, but a majority of the Linux kernel development is done as someone's paid job. I'd be surprised if something similar isn't true of other significant open source projects, such as Firefox, GNOME, KDE, Moblin, OpenOffice.org, MySQL, etc.

    3. Re:What Are the Reasons? by e_hu_man · · Score: 1

      foss software is not so much a hobby nowadays, so i don't think getting paid really isn't a primary differentiating factor. recent research indicates that significant contributions are being made to linux by hired hands (http://www.linuxfoundation.org/news-media/announcements/2009/08/linux-foundation-updates-study-linux-development-statistics-who-wri), over 70% of the kernel, for instance.

    4. Re:What Are the Reasons? by tecnico.hitos · · Score: 1

      So are you saying there are no women on FOSS?

      Just kid*thump* Ow!*whack* It was a jok*POW*

      --
      The good, the evil and the vacuum tubes.
    5. Re:What Are the Reasons? by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      I don't think Bruce said anything to imply that overt sexism was a bigger deal than institutional sexism. Anonymity doesn't help you deal with an ostensibly important slideshow filled with porn. (Though obviously this is an extreme examples, there are much smaller ones scattered along the way.)

    6. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      foss software is not so much a hobby nowadays, so i don't think getting paid really isn't a primary differentiating factor

      Sure it is. Just because a small percentage of the people involved in FOSS are getting paid, that doesn't change the fact that even for a high profile project like Linux 30% of the contributions are being made by people for no pay. And given that the full-timers are *likely* to be making more and larger contributions, I suspect that 30% represents the vast majority of developers involved in the project.

      I worked full time, for pay, on an open source project for several months... and most people don't get that much paycheck joy from it. The other 30 years I've been involved in FOSS have all been "on the side".

    7. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      Well, speaking for Linux, at least, Baloney. Not just a lot, but a majority of the Linux kernel development is done as someone's paid job.

      See my response to your compatriot.

      Look, even if you're absolutely right... no, let's say you're underestimating things, and FOSS has become 90% full time corporate developers over the past five years... or ten years... that wouldn't be long enough to make a huge dent in institutional sexism that's been developing since the '70s. I'm suggesting a possible *source* for any such institutional sexism, not trying to justify it. And for that you have to look back over the years to where the culture developed.

    8. Re:What Are the Reasons? by e_hu_man · · Score: 1

      okay, but times have changed. when you have such a significant contribution from non-hobbyists, saying that hobbying is the primary factor is rather unlikely.

    9. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      If most open source developers are doing it on their own time, then for most open source developers... particularly when they're getting started in open source... the experience is likely to be similar to that of other technical hobbyists. If you want to find out why there's an imbalance in FOSS developers, it's worthwhile looking at similar activities and seeing whether they have a similar imbalance... and even better, figuring out why and what to do about it.

    10. Re:What Are the Reasons? by e_hu_man · · Score: 1

      agreed. when you do that, you will account for those making under 30% of the contributions to linux.

      i just think you have to include those making the remaining 70+% too.

    11. Re:What Are the Reasons? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Except that periodically there are conferences, get togethers, etc. It isn't secret for long.

    12. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      The 70%+ aren't the ones who are just starting to get interested in open source. And even then, they're not hired in a vacuum, they're hired because they were already involved in Open Source, and they're going to in turn hire people who are already involved in Open Source. You have to look at where new-chums come from, and if they tend to be the "model railroaders"... it shouldn't be any surprise that there's a strong correlation. And that's where you need to look to see where the imbalance comes from.

    13. Re:What Are the Reasons? by NotBorg · · Score: 1

      The handle that counts is an e-mail address. It's very likely what you'll use to submit patches to a FOSS project. An e-mail address may or may not contain your name depending on if it was issued by an employer which may require you to use it to submit patches that were developed on company time. So sometimes anonymity can't be afforded. Mostly, however, if you want anonymity you can get it. Sure.

      However, in my experience, programmers are often a bit more egotistical than shy and want credit to their name to some extent. Reasons may vary but when it comes down to actually contributing to the project (by submitting code) they don't seem to put extra effort into hiding their identity.

      Beyond that, there's a tendency for FOSS developers to meet up in real life for conferences and such. I'm sure you could skip them too if you're really hiding. I just don't see anyone not involved in development of malware, botnets, or other illegal activity actually trying to hide their identity when it comes to actually contributing to a project.

      Also you can't copyright via Internet handle. You can't license something or enter a legal agreement under the name of FluffyBunnies29 without that being your real name. (At least as far as I know--I'm not a lawyer.)

      Click help, about, and you'll likely see real names. Check the change log you'll likely see real names.

      Yes, handles and anonymity are part of the Internet and FOSS developers also use the Internet. That doesn't mean they are hiding.

      --
      I want this account deleted.
    14. Re:What Are the Reasons? by Zerth · · Score: 1

      Thousands of writers copyright material under a name that isn't their legal one, many without revealing their identity to the copyright authorities. You do trade the life+70 to just 95 years in the US, unless you identify yourself to the copyright office before the term is up.

    15. Re:What Are the Reasons? by e_hu_man · · Score: 1

      i'm not sure why initial interest is the ruling factor. i would think retention is more important.

      it would be interesting to see the breakdown of women and men at the companies involved in foss (ie, where money is not a determining factor). until someone finds that data, i'm sure we'll be throwing conjecture at each other until neither of us can type any longer. i certainly respect what you're saying about hobbyists, but corporate foss is growing at quite a rapid pace.

    16. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      I have no idea whether the low rate of women in model railroading type activities is due to initial interest or retention, but that's the pool you have to recruit full time coders from.

      i'm sure we'll be throwing conjecture at each other until neither of us can type any longer

      Good. That means there's at least two people analyzing my theory. :)

      corporate foss is growing at quite a rapid pace

      EVERY programmer in my department is using open source and writing software that builds from FOSS to one degree or another. I think I'm the only one who has contributed changes to a FOSS project. *Any* FOSS project. So the "recruitment rate" is, let's see, under 0.4%... men and women both. "Corporate FOSS" doesn't automatically translate to "corporate programmers working on FOSS projects".

    17. Re:What Are the Reasons? by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Don't forget: you can tell HR if you're sexually harassed at work and the harasser will likely be removed. Do the same in a FOSS project and..."but he writes good patches, so it's ok!"

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    18. Re:What Are the Reasons? by azgard · · Score: 1

      I wonder, does the name "Andrea" count as male (in Italian) or female (in English)? I think relying on e-mail addresses is not very reliable.

    19. Re:What Are the Reasons? by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Previously I dismissed the "difference between men and women" arguments. This post made me consider that there may be another factor in that however, it is possible that men push their bosses more towards F/OSS. Still doubt its the main factor, and have no idea if its even a factor. Still something to consider.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    20. Re:What Are the Reasons? by NotBorg · · Score: 1

      The point is that if you become involved enough in a project, it will come out one way or another and I'd say that the bulk of people involved in FOSS development don't care about their anonymity when it comes to being part of the team. Being part of a successful project is probably something they would like to claim their being to.

      This is in stark contrast with the behavior of a typical forum or chat room where people just sit around and talk shit about other people, political crap, technology they really have no clue about, and etc. Hell no one wants to lay claim to that crap. That's where anonymous Internet handles get most of their use and abuse.

      Yes people can hide behind handles. That doesn't mean that people must or do in all situations. I don't see FOSS developers hiding much when it comes to being involved in a project.

      Click help->about in a few of your favorite open source programs and tell me what percentage of those first name-last name pairs are fictitious fabrications.

      So the answer to

      aren't a lot of FOSS activities typically conducted by your handle (i.e. not your name)?

      is: Yes Internet handles may be used by FOSS developers, but typically not for the express purpose of anonymity from others involved in the project. Sometimes to hide from overly critical, ignorant, and abusive end users maybe but we're talking about the interaction between team players. Again, click help->about and tell me how likely it is that contributers are actively hiding their identities from each other.

      --
      I want this account deleted.
    21. Re:What Are the Reasons? by npsimons · · Score: 1

      what's the reason why women aren't involved in [geeky/technical hobbies]

      The reason is something that programmers, especially FOSS programmers have extremely limited control over: society and "traditional" female/male roles. Technical solutions to social problems don't work, and probably never will.

      That being said, we in the FOSS community should hold ourselves to a higher standard, just as we hold our software to a higher standard. We should not tolerate prejudice of any kind, be it sexism, racism, etc. We may never get above 1.5% women FOSS developers, but that is no excuse to tolerate bigotry. Even from a utilitarian point of view, even if it doesn't bring in more women developers, prejudice closes the mind, and a closed mind is less apt to find inventive new ways to do things.

    22. Re:What Are the Reasons? by argent · · Score: 1

      Technical solutions to social problems don't work, and probably never will.

      At least not until we upgrade to Human 2.0.

  22. That's... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's BULLSHIT!
    What the hell does FOSS have to do with real-world issues like stupid sexist feminists and ALL OF THAT BULLSHIT?

  23. Or maybe you're wrong by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think the reaction is an expression of denial more than anything else.

    OK, how are we supposed to disagree without being "in denial"?

    1. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by malkavian · · Score: 1

      You aren't. That's the power of political pressure. You state that someone is in a particular state (which is one that's stated to be against the good of people at large), and that they're blind to that state. As soon as you postulate this, it's almost impossible for them to argue against it. You give no hard evidence, or statements of fact that can be disputed, just vague assertions that "everybody should know it, but you don't get it do you", make sure they're guaranteed to be of emotional impact rather than intellectual, and you can guarantee to have someone completely at your mercy.
      It's a very strong bullying tactic, which is why I don't like it.
      Turning round and saying "I have a problem with a,b and c because of x" is fine. Turning round and throwing pseudo statistics and tarring a whole swathe of people because of some fuzzy accusation is nothing short of attempting to bully the masses by exploiting unfounded feelings of guilt.

    2. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, how are we supposed to disagree without being "in denial"?

      You can't. Can't be critical of Obama without being a racist, either. Can't question "climate change" without being a oil company shill. Can't resist the gay agenda without being a homophobe.

      Many things verboten.

    3. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, think that it's perfectly possible to disagree without being in the Nile.

    4. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by martyros · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OK, how are we supposed to disagree without being "in denial"?

      Well, you could start by actually taking a hard look and seeing if what's being said is true, instead of being knee-jerk defensive.

      I haven't seen any posts here saying, "I know several women in FOSS, and I asked them if sexism was a problem, and they said 'No, I don't know what they're talking about.'" What I see mostly is people making a bunch of arguments without actually asking, "Could this be true? Might there be something in this?" And actually listening to people (in this case, especially women) before arguing. The difference between "I've listened to what you said, and thought about it, but I disagree" and denial is pretty obvious.

      There's plenty to read about if you're willing to look.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    5. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by hot+soldering+iron · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's part of the trap. It's like testing to see if you're a witch. Tie you up and drop you in the river, if you float you're a witch! She's just trying to start up a witch hunt, but unfortunately this crowd is a little smarter than the Inquisitor.

      --
      When you want something built, come see me. If you want correct grammar and spelling, get a F*ing liberal arts student.
    6. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by psydeshow · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well, you could start by actually taking a hard look and seeing if what's being said is true, instead of being knee-jerk defensive.

      I love how this gets modded troll. Nice one.

      +1 Rational

    7. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      I think the reaction is an expression of denial more than anything else.

      OK, how are we supposed to disagree without being "in denial"?

      Seriously? Don't deny that sexism exists.

      There, that was easy. You can disagree that the comments were intended to be denigrating to women, but that's sort of beside the point. Denying that they are sexist is like proving the existence of god: you can't.

    8. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the beauty of the way this moron wrote it, either you agree or you are wrong.

    9. Re:Or maybe you're wrong by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Can't question "climate change" without being a oil company shill. Can't resist the gay agenda without being a homophobe.

      There's your problem - climate change is a known quantity, questioning it is questioning the reality of ice ages. As for the gay agenda, the idea that there's a gay agenda besides the book where I wrote dates with my ex-girlfriend (well, okay, I'm bisexual) is itself loony homophobia.

  24. Asking someone out is sexist? by onion2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or, if you prefer, listen to the horror stories female developers tell about sexist remarks or being asked out for dates.

    Making sexist remarks, ok, I can understand how that might be seen as being sexist. But how is asking a woman out considered sexist behaviour? Face it, if I were to join a group that's 98.5% women and demonstrate that I share an interest with all of them then I strongly suspect I'd get asked out too. Would I complain that their behaviour was sexist? No. Obviously not.

    No. I'd be making lurve. All those ladies! Oh yeah baby!

    Wait. I think I might be being sexist. Err.. Oh dear.

    1. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Face it, if I were to join a group that's 98.5% women and demonstrate that I share an interest with all of them then I strongly suspect I'd get asked out too.

      No, you wouldn't.

    2. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If done repeatedly, and getting turned down repeatedly, asking someone out in the workplace rises to the level of sexual harassment. At least in the eyes of our corporate lawyers who insist on training us in the topic every year.

    3. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try to see that experience from a woman's point of view. Imagine if you were working in a group of 98.5% gay men (or straight women if you're a gay man)... and they asked you out. A lot. Enough to interfere with your work or participation.

      Some guy asks me out while I'm trying to focus on something. First, I have to interrupt whatever I'm working on or thinking about to deal with this intrusion that shouldn't have happened in the first place. Then I have to respond. There's a lot of pressure right there. How's he going to react if I say no? Attack me in some way? That happens a LOT. You say no to some guy and suddenly you're this bitch he hates and constantly talks bad about. Does he try to sabotage your work, argue against your patches, refuse to consider your ideas... because he hates you for rejecting him? If he doesn't turn hostile, will he just get distant and prefer to avoid or ignore me making it awkward for me to participate? Will he go the other way and subject me to all those meaningful looks, stares, sighs, etc? If, for some strange reason, I say yes... then we stop seeing each other, does the above happen then? Does someone else figure because I said yes to that guy I'll say yes to him and start the cycle over? It's unprofessional and unpleasant to have to deal with.

      If I'm writing code, doing network admin or even just re-capping a motherboard... I shouldn't have to deal with other people pushing their romantic interest on me. It gets VERY old, VERY fast. ESPECIALLY when it happens a lot. You get to the point where you're just sick of it and disgusted with the people who do it and don't want to be near them. I just want to do the work, why should I have to deal with that sort of thing just because I was born with ovaries?

      Never mind the patronizing comments from guys who don't know a NOP from a POP, an #ifdef from an #include or a diode from a resistor... but either want to impress you or can't stand the idea that you might just have a clue. It's not fun to be in that situation and, frankly, if I can't just relax and be a PERSON instead of potential sex to the people I'd be dealing with to get involved with a project... why would I want to be there? It's just not worth it.

    4. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're not asking out just as many men as women, you are being sexist, you insensitive clod!

    5. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Just say, "Sorry, you're not my type," or "Sorry, I'm just not interested in you in that way." Women have such trouble being honest when turning guys down. They'll say pretty much anything except the actual reason. "Sorry, I'm still not over my last relationship." If he sees you walking arm in arm with some hunk the next day, of course he's going to be pissed, because you obviously lied to him. If you just told him the truth, he'd leave you alone and still respect you. And he would get over you faster.

      And if I was working with a bunch of gay guys that kept hitting on me, I'd make it clear early on that I don't swing that way. If they kept haranguing me after I made that clear, then I'd file a complaint.

      You're trying to make us understand but there's really no equivalent for men. Most men would be more than happy to have more sexual attention from the gender(s) that interest them. Women tend to only want sexual attention from men they find attractive.

    6. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by tool462 · · Score: 1

      Obligatory Flight of the Conchords:

      "I want to tell her how hot she is, but she’ll think I’m being sexist.
      She’s so hot she’s making me sexist."

    7. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Actually, he probably would. People ask each other out all the time, it is part of being human. Women in open source, which is not necessarily a professional atmosphere all the time, can expect that heterosexual men in open source will ask them out. Likewise, men can expect that women will ask them out. There are many, many more men than women, and thus the frequency of men asking women out will be many times higher than visa versa.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    8. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

      But how is asking a woman out considered sexist behaviour?

      Very obviously it is sexist because you did not ask out an equal number of men, proportionate to the standard distribution of gender in our species. You clearly have a bias for asking out women, not men, and are therefore sexist. :P

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    9. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by mdarksbane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sexist answer: http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/clips/sexual-harassment/258532/

      More Balanced Answer: I think it's an example of setting rules for the few bad cases. Most girls would find it flattering if a guy asked her out, took no for an answer, and went back to work. They find it less flattering when no one can talk about circuits because they're staring at her chest, or constantly try to impress her in annoying ways, or just refuse to leave her alone. In a field where most of the employees are male, you're assured a fair number of assholes, even if the overall percentage of them is low. So we set rules to keep everyone in line.

    10. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, again, asking me in the first place is inappropriate and uncomfortable for me in that environment. There's a problem before we even get to my answer.

      Those answers sound simple, but they don't work. Even something as simple as "No, thank you." doesn't work. I'm not guessing, I'm speaking from personal experience. Some guys, even most, will accept it. However, the percentage of guys who WON'T is high enough to create a serious problem for someone who doesn't want to have to deal with that JUST because of her gender.

      Yes... and if they blew off your complaint with "Just say, 'Sorry, you're not my type'".... it becomes a cultural problem. If the solutions were this easy they would have worked by now.

      I'm not trying to make anyone do anything... I'm commenting on something I saw that demonstrated a lot of assumptions that aren't true. Add in, what about lesbians? They don't want sexual attention from ANY man. It's always inappropriate in a professional environment. Focus on the work, not the person's body.

    11. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Actually, he probably would. People ask each other out all the time, it is part of being human.

      Women are far, far, far less likely to sak someone out than men. Just a fact.

    12. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Well, but how would you feel if you joined a group that was 98.5% gay men, and you (as a straight man, I'm assuming) suddenly got hit on every time you posted a message to the mailing list? Would you be making a lot of posts, even though it was a list about stuff you were really interested in? I'm guessing no.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    13. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe some would, but being asked in a professional environment or situation is simply uncomfortable. Add in that, even if the gentleman goes right back to work and acts completely appropriate otherwise... I've had to deal with that stress. And the next time. And the time after that.

      How about not singling us out in any way JUST because we're female?

    14. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      It's not fun to be in that situation and, frankly, if I can't just relax and be a PERSON instead of potential sex to the people I'd be dealing with to get involved with a project... why would I want to be there? It's just not worth it.

      Then guess what, you can't work with straight guys (unless you are completely unattractive). I had a friend who once made the statement that guys are only friends with women they want to sleep with. That isn't entirely true, but it is very close to true. When I review the women friends I have made in my life, they fall into three categories: women I find attractive (or at least found attractive when we became friends), women I am/was forced to spend a large amount of time around do to some activity I wanted to do for other reasons, women who are close friends of my wife. Every woman in the first category is one who I would have slept with if circumstances had been different (I wasn't dating someone seriously/ married at the time, she wasn't dating someone seriously/married at the time). That is a fact of life, if you don't like it, sorry, that's the way it is.
      Of course what you said is like most "sexual harassment", if the woman thinks the guy is unattractive it is sexual harassment, if she thinks he is attractive it isn't.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    15. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you met your dream guy (or girl) at work would you never express interest in them for the sake of professionalism? Assuming you are such a professional that you would not, I would have to say you are in the minority. People date co-workers all the time. Just like they form friendships at work. Asking people to stay 100% professional 100% of the time is not realistic, nor is it even ideal. I'm sorry that a bunch of unattractive men keep asking you out at work but I reiterate my original post.

      1) Stay honest. "No, I'm not interested in you." No one likes being lied to.
      2) If the person creates problems after you turn him down, report him. The problem is with him.

      If you have to report 20% of your co-workers then there's obviously something wrong with your place of work, and you may want to speak to a lawyer if management can't address your concerns.

      Lying, trying to let people down softly, only compounds your problems.

    16. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      So why do normal human interactions stop at the worksite? At every job I have had, I have had friendships that extended beyond work hours. A girlfriend is just someone who meets the "friend" requirements while also being attractive to you.

      Do you consider it horribly insulting if *you* ask a co-worker or classmate out? When are people allowed to approach each other - only in specific dating zones? Is being attracted to someone in and of itself sexist?

      I think the bigger problem here is that people need to remember that co-workers are only people who are *paid* to deal with you for 8 hours a day until proven otherwise.

    17. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh... no. I'm not there to be your personal friend. I'm not there for any reason that has to do with you. My being there is NOT about you. You can have whatever little disturbing fantasies you want. I just don't want to hear about them. I don't want to hear it if you find me attractive OR unattractive. I'm there to WORK, not to be the focus of your issues about women be they positive or negative.

      I don't care how attractive someone is. It's irrelevant. I know, you don't want to hear that... it means that men who keep saying that tired old lie have to accept some responsibility for their actions instead of blaming their choices on the women they target... but it's true. It's called professionalism.

    18. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Terwin · · Score: 1

      Here is a problem:
      Humans are inherently sexual beings.
      The survival of the species demands every calory of energy that is not being spent on basic survival(and no few that are) be spent on procreation. That is the first, last, and only goal of our genes: survive into the next generation, then the next, then the next, and so on. Anything that interferes with that will eventually be crowded out by those that do not have that interfering behaviour.

      Now, humans have developed a civilization so that survival is not nearly the challenge that it once was, and we have much more available energy to spend on things beyond survival and procreation.
      The problem is, we still have the same drives, impulses, and needs that our primitive ancestors had.
      We can sublimate and subvert those to a limited extent, but we are fighting against millions of years of evolution for every step we take, and if we are successful, then those abilities/techniques will die out or become rare because those without those abilities/techniques will out-breed those with them.

      Society, for the most part, has managed to put some reasonable restrictions on procreation(no close relatives, children below the age of consent, people married to someone else, boss/subordinate, etc.) but outside of those constraints(and some times even within them), a majority of interaction between a person and those people with the appropriate gender, is all about finding out if the person you are speculating about will indeed have sex with you.

      That is the way people are wired and we do not have the ability to change this in any significant way.

      Any time you join a large group with a vast majority of them desiring a member of your gender/sexuality/hair-style/whatever for their sexual partner, you WILL get propositioned. Even worse, the clumsy/desperate/clueless/less desirable ones will usually predominate(because the 'good' ones have an easier time finding mates).

      Then, let's make the gender of those desiring you the one that is more aggressive in seeking procreation.
      And, just for kicks, let's make the archetype of the group someone who has a drastically reduced chance of procreating for some reason(social inexperience, shyness, reduced expression of primal sexual desirability traits, etc), and you could be Jabba-the-hut in a dress and get propositioned.

      If you want to interact with humans, there are certain facts you will just need to get used to. Some guys in any group of sufficient size will sniff around any female like a male dog checking to see if a bitch is in heat. Even worse, many of the worst examples will have been deceived in the past, so they will come back and keep checking, just to make sure.

      If you do not want to deal with this, then you can either move yourself into a protected category(seminaries and convents are always looking for good people), or move away from people entirely (I mostly pursue the Hermit option myself).

      So long as the human race is a vibrant and thriving species there can never be an elimination of the expression of sexual interest. The one requires the other, and I do not wish to be part of a dying species.

    19. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      It's not sexist, but if you're working with her, she's a captive audience.

      It changes the dynamic a LOT.

    20. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are so many false assumptions here that I cannot even begin to address them all. Here are responses to a few that stand out to me.

      1. MANY companies have policies against coworkers having a romantic involvement.

      2. Do you even realize the sexism in this response? : "I'm sorry that a bunch of unattractive men keep asking you out at work but I reiterate my original post." Thank you for so immediately dismissing a real and valid problem with a patronizing and demeaning comment. It has NOTHING to do with how attractive the person is.

      3. Why do you keep assuming I lie? I gave an example of my responses. Where is the lie in "No, thank you."

      4. All too often, like right now, those kinds of complaints get ignored. Men generally make the assumption that the man did nothing wrong and the woman's just mental for feeling upset.

      5. Who do you report sexism to in a FOSS project, who won't generally simply mock or attack you for it? Please, point me to the FOSS Sexism Complaint Desk staffed by honest people who DON'T make assumptions.

      6. Again, why assuming that I'm lying to the men? This is completely unrelated to the topic under discussion aside from being wrong.

      As a follow up why are you attempting to turn my commentary on a problem legitimately brought up into a chance for you to attack me as a person?

    21. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      Reducing it to sex is a bit too simple.

      I once dated a girl who made the observation that I have too many female friends. She felt that the only reason I'd have so many women friends is because there would be a sexual chemistry. Either they want to sleep with me, or I want to sleep with them. That for me to have so few male friends really said something about my character.

      I gave it a lot of thought and I think it is partially true. The conclusion I think is wrong though. I think it is normal to have feelings of attraction to other people. It's normal to want to have sex with other people. It's normal also to respect boundaries, to respect their other friendships and relationships. To respect working relationships and the nature of the workplace.

      It's also normal for our partner to be jealous of those friendships. So what can we do about it?

    22. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Why is that though? You want to talk about out dated social mores, the concept that the man is expected to ask the woman out on the date seems to be up there on the list of ones that shouldn't be around any more.

    23. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Tranzistors · · Score: 1

      >"I want to tell her how hot she is, but she’ll think I’m being sexist.
      >She’s so hot she’s making me sexist."
      Bitch!

    24. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Asking someone out with no prior indication of interest is obnoxious. It's not sexist, but it's annoying.

      Now, if dozens of guys are asking you out, just because you happen to share a common interest with them, the level of obnoxiousness goes up.

      Interestingly, most straight guys find even ONE gay man finding them interesting and maybe asking them out tremendously offensive and inappropriate (maybe you don't and just wave it off or accept or whatever -- I don't know anything about you!) but it's easy to find stories about that sort of thing.

      If you joined a FOSS project and found out that 98.5% of the programmers were gay and they were constantly hitting on you or making racy remarks that made you uncomfortable, would you be so sanguine, I wonder? Maybe you would. Most guys would quit in frustration.

      Unwanted attention is a pain in the ass. I admit, I'm not subject to it (I'm a straight guy, and reality, unlike my example, is not 98.5% gay guys), but my partner often is. She steps carefully and minds what she says, lest she make people think she's more interested than she is, and unintentionally leave herself open to unwanted attention.

    25. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by martyros · · Score: 1

      Making sexist remarks, ok, I can understand how that might be seen as being sexist. But how is asking a woman out considered sexist behaviour? Face it, if I were to join a group that's 98.5% women and demonstrate that I share an interest with all of them then I strongly suspect I'd get asked out too. Would I complain that their behaviour was sexist? No. Obviously not.

      Can you really not imagine how it would make a woman uncomfortable to be asked out by someone every other LUG meeting? Not by someone who had already established a relationship of mutual respect and interest, and was reasonably confident that there could be mutual romantic interest as well, but by a guy who is just so excited to meet his "dream girl" who knows Linux, or worse yet, the guy who wanted to ask "how to talk to girls"?

      And that's really the problem: not that the 40 guys at the LUG are overtly sexist, but that their individual choices, made as a group, have a strong deterrent effect. It's just a fact that when women come to a group that's so overwhelmingly male-dominated, they get male attention that makes them uncomfortable. They get the same kind of unwanted male attention in lower doses when the gender ratio is 50/50, so they're a little used to it; but when it's 40-to-1, it's a bit too much to take. (I suppose it's a bit like the Slashdot Effect, actually: each slashdotter is following a link to a web page, which is a perfectly reasonable thing to do; but the total effect is melted servers. At the LUG, each individual guy just says to himself, "Wow, what a cool girl! I wonder if she'd go out with me? Can't hurt to ask!" but the overall effect is overload.)

      So the question for you is: will you try to find out and understand what things you and the people around you in FOSS are doing, quite innocently and unintentionally, that discourage women, and try to change them? Or will you insist on judging women as basically the same as you, but more curvy, and say, "That wouldn't bother me, so why should it bother them"?

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    26. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Why is that though? You want to talk about out dated social mores, the concept that the man is expected to ask the woman out on the date seems to be up there on the list of ones that shouldn't be around any more.

      Oh I agree completely. But that doesn't change what the facts are. I would love to be asked out sometime.

    27. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      Asking someone out with no prior indication of interest is obnoxious. It's not sexist, but it's annoying.

      So what about the fact that such a big number of men feel entitled to do ask women out with no prior indication of interest? You don't think that's institutional sexism that men are expected and encouraged to act in a manner that systematically annoys women?

    28. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is an excellent reply, thank you.

      I think that your reply has it's own answer... respect. By respecting each other and honoring those boundaries, friendships, relationships, nature of the environment, etc... we eliminate pretty much all of those sorts of problems.

      I don't mind if my partner has other female friends. Because I respect and trust my partner. I might get a little jealous over the time spent with those friends because, of course, I'd rather that time were spent on me (grins)... but I respect their need to have those friends and I trust them enough for the gender of those friends not to matter to me.

    29. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      Or, if you prefer, listen to the horror stories female developers tell about sexist remarks or being asked out for dates.

      Making sexist remarks, ok, I can understand how that might be seen as being sexist. But how is asking a woman out considered sexist behaviour?

      You obviously haven't read the feminist manifesto. It's sexist because it's wrong to be a man.

      Now, feminists, let me turn this around. I've never been the target of sexists remarks or been asked on a date. Nor have a woman paid for dinner or a drink, held a door for me or taken my coat. I never heard you clamour for women to be included in the mandatory national service and sent to Iraq. Neither have I heard you fight for the abolishment of the law that requires a man to pay for the upkeep and luxury items(such as makeup) for his wife, when there is no law that requires the opposite even though there is almost no gender inequality in the jobmarket.

      In conclusion: you're all a bunch female chauvinists. Luv ya, qc_dk.

    30. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, of course many companies have such policies. They are scared of lawsuits, and for good reason. It would be financially unwise not to be. However, typical corporate policy has about as much moral authority as the average click thru license. That doesn't mean, of course, you can't say "corporate policy forbids us from dating." You're not likely to make many friends by sticking to the letter of the corporate policy though.

      No, I don't see the sexism in my previous response. I am not trying to be patronizing. I listed a course of action you could take originally, and your response did little to change the course of action I would suggest, so I reiterated it. You brought no relevant new information in with your last post that I was responding to, so all I could do was reiterate. I don't see how that's patronizing.

      "Attractive" means, by definition (the one I'm using anyway), that you want to be with someone in that way. So I'm taking as a hypothetical that you do or do not want to be with someone. Obviously, you want to be with none of these people, or else you wouldn't be complaining about them. Then, by definition, they are unattractive to you. If you find every co-worker unattractive by the very fact that they are co-workers, then you are an unusual person. Do I mean this to be a personal attack? No, I point out your rareness because it would be unreasonable for me to assume that the average person finds all co-workers unattractive by the very fact that they are co-workers. You then need to argue that (1) I'm wrong because the average person finds no one at work attractive, or (2) regardless of the regularity and accepted nature of relationships at work, they are still (morally?) wrong.

      Now, you say attractiveness is irrelevant. I disagree. Again, by definition, you will have to want to be asked out by someone who you find attractive. Most people find attractive people in many different walks of life. School, work, social activities. And some relationships are inappropriate to form, regardless of mutual attraction, such as between student and teacher. However, I am claiming that it would be unreasonable to exclude on its face any relationship that started at work. Especially in the boom days, people would often work 12 hour days. Again, to expect all interaction there to be 100% professional is unreasonable.

      Another argument I made in this same vein was perhaps not explicit enough. Do you suggest that people cannot form friendships at work? If so, why? If not, why then are relationships taboo?

      I assumed you lied when turning people down because your response to my suggestion of saying "I'm just not interested in you" is "Life isn't that simple." The obvious conversational implication is that you tell some white lie to send them off without hurting their feelings. Now, maybe I'm in a weird microcosm of society, but I have never heard of any woman telling any man, "I'm just not interested in you in that way" when turning him down (or any equivalent).

      Saying "No, thanks" is OK, I guess, but it doesn't address the issue. You have no obligation to tell anyone any reason for not going out with them, however, there is no closure in a statement such as "No, thanks." He's going to think, "Well I'll just ask her again tomorrow, maybe she's just not feeling well today, or maybe she's just tired." Having interest in someone tends to cause wishful thinking. Eliminating any room for this wishful thinking is the best strategy to end it. That's why I say honesty and forthrightness is the best strategy here.

      If management is ignoring complaints, then complain to the relevant department in your company. If there is no such department or you've already gone as high as you can, then it's time to bring in the lawyers. If you can't convince a lawyer and a majority of of 12 impartial jurors about your case, then that speaks to the merits of your case. There are decades of legislation addressing the very problems you speak of in corporate environments. It is your obligation to

    31. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by amolapacificapaloma · · Score: 1

      So, are you saying all the women in FLOSS are lesbians?

      --
      exp(i*pi)+1=0
    32. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1

      Face it, if I were to join a group that's 98.5% women and demonstrate that I share an interest with all of them then I strongly suspect I'd get asked out too. No, you wouldn't.

      But don't beer goggles affect both sexes equally?

    33. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1
      So would I, but I'm a guy so I have to do the asking. Usually, it goes like this:
      1. See cute girl about the right age. Frequently indian or asian
      2. Try to spot a ring without looking creepy - the ring is usually present because, let's be honest, lots of guys have similar tastes in women.
      3. Approach them when they aren't already talking - bad juju to barge into a conversation
      4. Chat a bit, feel them out and maybe do the asking. Gotta do a couple minutes of chatting to avoid crazies, married people you missed, and people already dating - feels like a jerk move
      5. Maybe they say yes, maybe no.
      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    34. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      If I don't ask someone out, I don't get dates - It's that simple. If women were more forward, I'd be less forward. Of course, I don't go with the ambush proposition, so maybe you aren't talking about me.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    35. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      If I don't ask someone out, I don't get dates - It's that simple.

      Well, not to put too a fine point to it, nobody's entitled to dates. You can't justify asshole behavior by saying that you have to be an asshole to get dates.

      If women were more forward, I'd be less forward.

      Unforwardness and unassertiveness by women is a problem, yes.

      Of course, I don't go with the ambush proposition, so maybe you aren't talking about me.

      Maybe. This shit is, to a large extent, context and statistics. As another poster said, if you get the context right, you can absolutely go ahead, and I of course have no context to judge you personally in this regard. Still, as a general rule, men fail to even think about the context in the first place.

      There's a theme in feminist writing that deals with situations similar to this. The idea is that one common form of sexism is for people to disregard context when dealing with women. There are several examples:

      1. Pick-up artists who teach courses on how to "get" women by using a set of fixed techniques or actions that only engage superficially with the targets. "Say X, do Y and don't do Z, and women will sleep with you."
      2. Date rape apologists who go into elaborate discussions of hypothetical scenarios that they insist are not rape because of the woman's actions; "it's not rape because the woman did X (or did not do Y)". This way of framing the issues basically boils down to asking when is a man entitled to have sex with a woman, based on a superficial observation of what she says or does (and not on understanding whether she wants to have sex).
      3. The present example, where men make advances on women without even thinking how the advance would look from the perspective of the woman who receives it, given that man's previous interactions with that woman (if any!).

      In all cases, the men tend to focus obsessively on the concrete actions, without stopping to think about the contexts. It's a form of magical thinking: ask the girl out on a date and tell her she's pretty, and she will sleep with you; no attempt is made to understand any deeper the relationship between the actions and outcomes.

    36. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      No, that's only true with --creepy stalkers with no self-esteem-- nice guys

    37. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      You're a moron, you haven't read such a sexist manifesto or if you have the only thing you can quote is a strawman written by a deranged delusional paranoiac who nobody in any branch of feminism pays heed to, unless there's crazy-feminism.

    38. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by Rick17JJ · · Score: 1

      Where can I join this hypothetical group, consisting of 98.5% women, where we all have a common shared interest in something? It would be great if some of them would actually be flirting with me.

      Yes, I might need to tell a few of them "no thank you." If I latter were to get married (and they did see my ring or already know), I would just say "sorry, I am married." Even then, I would still happily continue participating in the subject of our shared interest.

    39. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Well, not to put too a fine point to it, nobody's entitled to dates. You can't justify asshole behavior by saying that you have to be an asshole to get dates.

      I don't demand dates, I suggest them. Everyone's entitled to try.

      # Pick-up artists who teach courses on how to "get" women by using a set of fixed techniques or actions that only engage superficially with the targets. "Say X, do Y and don't do Z, and women will sleep with you."

      For the most part, it doesn't work too well. Of course, if you're pissed about men being fake, well women are fake too. I currently have a chris rock routine in my head, if you know where I'm going.

      Date rape apologists who go into elaborate discussions of hypothetical scenarios that they insist are not rape because of the woman's actions; "it's not rape because the woman did X (or did not do Y)". This way of framing the issues basically boils down to asking when is a man entitled to have sex with a woman, based on a superficial observation of what she says or does (and not on understanding whether she wants to have sex).

      Well, we can only interpret actions and words. No insight on feelings. If a woman is participating enthusiastically, it ain't rape. Naturally, the flip side of date rape is 'cold light of morning rape' - the woman decides the next day to revoke consent and cries rape because she did something/someone stupid.

      # The present example, where men make advances on women without even thinking how the advance would look from the perspective of the woman who receives it, given that man's previous interactions with that woman (if any!).

      Which is boorish, but not illegal. You aren't likely to get a date without some sort of connection, but all that's going to happen is her being offended.

      It's a form of magical thinking: ask the girl out on a date and tell her she's pretty, and she will sleep with you; no attempt is made to understand any deeper the relationship between the actions and outcomes.

      Shallow relations for shallow people - some women do operate that way. Obviously, men do too, or else they're tired of not understanding the whole dating thing, so they pick up a date kit.

      As for me, I am reading a pickup type book - it has advice on seduction and approach, which I need to work on, but most of the advice is variations on

      • Be interesting - don't rely on women to validate your worth
      • Don't lie, but don't overshare early on
      • how to gauge interest
      • talk to lots of women - it is a numbers game to some extent. You don't have to try and date them all, but a bit of light flirting is fun and keeps you fresh.

      The techniques apply to short term physical things as well as long term - it's up to the guy - was anyway. If you as a woman want it to be up to you, read the book in reverse and go pick up someone of your own.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    40. Re:Asking someone out is sexist? by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      You're a moron, ...

      A most compelling argument. Well researched no doubt. I prostrate myself before your superior intelligence. My lifegoal shall be to match your perfection of acerbic wit, though such excellence will forever be out of reach for a simpleton such as I.

  25. I put this in the same box as the obvious elitism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Nothing is so prevalent among FOSS developers as that chunk of people with the elitist attitude. Anyone who's ever asked for help in, let's say, #whatever-foss-project on Freenode, knows exactly what kind of people, what kind of "tough crowd", they are; a stereotype so "nailed" you could hang a coat on it; the know-it-all complete-opposite-of-a-people's-person.

    Instead of being friendly and helpful, spending 30 seconds giving a kind answer to help another, these people instead gladly spend 5 minutes elaborating to another how stupid they are, how wrong they are, how inefficient their idea is, how bad their way of thinking is, how wrong they are for trying to learn things the way they do, how wrong they try to solve problems and solve their task, and, in the end, that they should just "rtfm/google" or similar.

    People who have a hard time getting along with others in real life situations often try to assert power, as a means of compensation, where they can: in "their field".

  26. "Noooo. Noooo. that's just ignorant....." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obligatory South Park reference. Had to be done.

  27. How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Qbertino · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He mentions geeks asking peer women out for a date as an example for being sexistic. WTF?
    A single woman amoung dozens of men actually is likely to be asked out for a date more often than each man. How is that sexistic?

    That aside I presume this is a vocal few distorting perception of the majority. With feminists and 'manly' programmers alike.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      A single man among dozens of women is less likely to be asked out than any 1 of the women. THAT is sexist. I demand that women ask men out more.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    2. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because they're geeks. If they were socially-adjusted, attractive men, it wouldn't be sexist at all. Its only sexist if you don't want the guy to flirt with you. Also, they shouldn't have to actually tell the man they're not interested. They should just know. Most of these creeps have the audacity of not reading your mind.

    3. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by houghi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They handle every subject : http://www.xkcd.com/642/
      Even their subject is accurate.
      And I am aiming for 'sad but true' mod points.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    4. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "sexistic"

      What is this new word that you've coined?

    5. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by tilandal · · Score: 1

      I suppose that is a valid question so I'll take a stab at answering.

      Asking someone out on a date is not sexist if done in the correct context. What constitutes the correct context? The single biggest factor is there has to be a reasonable expectation that a date will really happen. What often happens is this:

      "Oh wow, you're a girl?"

      "Yes"

      "Will you go out with me? :D"

      *logs off*

      The message this type of thing send out is 'I'm more interested in whats between your legs then what you may have to contribute'. I highly doubt any women are contributing to Linux in order to get asked out by random guys who may not even live on the same continent as them. When you are more interested in a persons gender then what they have to say that is sexism. I was playing an online game once when someone looked at my tag and asked "Are you a girl?" my reply was "Why would it matter?" He then goes on and on about how cool is is to meet a girl and how hes never met one that played computer games before. That kind of stuff gets old real quick.

    6. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by lgw · · Score: 1

      The message you should take from this is that people are curious about curiosities. If I were playing an online game and discovered than another player was a senator, I would find that remarkable and would likely comment on it. The curiosity value in gaming with a senator would exceed my interest in how good he was at the game.

      That's not senator-ism, that's just being entertained by novelty.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    7. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by tilandal · · Score: 1

      Maybe but don't expect your senator to like it.

    8. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would, senators are total attention whores for the most part. But that's just my bad example.

      If you don't want people paying attention to the fact that you're a curiosity, you can either: hide that fact and get on with business, take your lumps as a pioneer making it less of a curiosity when the next senator logs in, or try to change human nature. Two of those approaches have merit.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    9. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by tilandal · · Score: 1

      I think most people choose #4 Go find something better to do. After all, donating time to OSS is a hobby. Its something you do because you enjoy it. If all you get is grief why bother?

      Also, excusing bad behavior because it is 'human nature' isn't really a good argument. Weather you want to call it sexism or not, the fact is, that the actions of some people in the OSS community tend to alienate women. Hiding the fact that you are a woman might spare you some direct harassment (which is probably rare in all honesty) but it doesn't change the fact that the environment is just not comfortable.

    10. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by lgw · · Score: 1

      I'm not "excusing" anything, nor condemning anything. People are just people. And attempting to change human nature is just stupid. You're right of course that that puts some people off, but then again some people just need to grow a thicker skin.

      Does the FOSS culture make some women feel excluded? Sure. You know what: it makes lots of people feel excluded (including me). There are seriously a disproportionate collection of assholes there (though I've never seen sexism out of proportion to any other sort of social maladjustment). But the community is a place where serious geeks can feel comfortable being themselves. It's pretty much the only place in the world some of these guys can find social acceptance. It's all about the code, and anyone who tries to make it about something else is going to be ostracized.

      If you want to participate in a community, don't ask the entire community to change so that you "feel comfortable". That won't be well received anywhere. There are many rational options (including not participating), but that's not one of them.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    11. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally couldn't care less about participating but if you are going to ask the question of "Is it fair to say that there is sexism in the FOSS?" I would have to say that yes it does exist, yes it does drive away women, and yes it will probably hurt FOSS in the long run. If this is going to change the answer is not to ask women to suck it up and spend their free time putting up with assholes.

    12. Re:How is asking a woman out for a date sexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I don't think this is true, all of the (admittedly small sample) times that I have dated, it has been through the females advances not mine, and, you may laugh, but I have been in several situations (in the workplace) were I have been objectified by both females and homosexual men.

  28. Woah there by Random2 · · Score: 1

    'Yall be postin' in a troll thread now.

    Really, I don't see how this isn't more than just a troll to get people to read the blog post or just a personal rant from the author. Maybe if the article was backed up with statistics and proof would this be a worthwhile read.

    Simply crying wolf won't solve a problem. If there's an issue, present it with the data to support it.

    --
    "Our goal each year should be to increase the number of goals we set for ourselves!"
  29. What a pile of cack by joss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > They seem unaware that institutions and customs can be sexist simply by what they value or how they operate, that even something like a discourse developed by men talking to men can institutionalize sexism. Nor do they understand that, by simply accepting such institutions or ways of acting, they become supporters of sexism.

    Maybe they understand what you are trying to say perfectly well, but think its a pile of steaming of crap. A bunch of the arguments boil down to saying people could only be disagreeing with because they are too ignorant or stupid to know better.

    > Similarly, I assumed that, in the FOSS community, if you were a free software supporter, you were concerned about social justice and would therefore be against sexism as well.

    Social justice... ffs.. maybe there is a correlation between caring about free software issues and issues that matter, such as.. I don't know, actual social justice, meaning issues of people being murdered, enslaved, raped or denied education, healthcare, opportunity, whatever. Maybe your interpretation of people not falling over themselves to appease your particular interpretation of how they ought to behave does not entirely correlate with not caring about social justice.

    In summary, fuck off and take your smug, self righteous, time-wasting bullshit elsewhere please.

    --
    http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    1. Re:What a pile of cack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed...

      Female genital cutting is worth getting bent out of shape about. Some idiot putting porn in a presentation? Yeah, that was a . It's not that I think this is acceptable behavior... But let's be realistic: If I got upset every time someone did something ignorant or stupid (even myself, I'm not perfect), I'd never get anything done.

  30. Sexism is mostly an excuse for stupid women by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In school we had a girl that was black. That's probably not so special in the US but here in Germany the population percentage of back people is quite low so there rarely are more then 1-2 in each year.
    She didn't have any friends, nobody really liked her. And why? Well, if you ask her it was because everyone else was racist. Of cause nobody liked her because she was black, that's why!

    But then there just so happend to be another black girl who transferred from a different school a few years later. And she was popular, everyone liked her. How could that be? I thought the whole class was full of racists who didn't like the poor black girl? And now they all like the new black girl? Impossible!

    The explanation is simple: Nobody in the class was racist. The other girl just happened to be stupid, ignorant and generally a giant pain in the ass. But since she was black she just blamed it on the color of her skin - that's much easier then accepting that she should maybe thinking about changing her behavior if we wants to make friends.

    From what I see this seems to be a very similar case. "Raise the subject of sexism" sounds like this person just didn't get what she wanted and now is pissed and is trying to blame it on everybody else, just not herself.
    Sad, really sad.

    1. Re:Sexism is mostly an excuse for stupid women by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The author's a man. But please feel free to play again!

    2. Re:Sexism is mostly an excuse for stupid women by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However it's highly unlikely that every single woman in the FOSS community is a giant pain in the arse.

  31. Some examples would be useful by milgr · · Score: 2, Informative
    I search the post an linked articles for concrete examples of sexism. I found some - about 4 indirections away from slashdot. http://www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-HOWTO/Encourage-Women-Linux-HOWTO.html links to some eight year old posts that are sexist.

    All of the high-tech companies that I've worked for have many more men than women. Most of the applications for positions are from men.

    In over 20 years in the industry, I only remember observing one sexist incident.

    --
    Where law ends, tyranny begins -- William Pitt
    1. Re:Some examples would be useful by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Your worldview likely differs from the author's though. You may not view something like a comment that you implemented an algorithm in an inefficient way as sexist, but the authors of this study might. I've noticed that with people who have a chip on their shoulder about something, they can read sexism/racism/etc... into just about anything.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
  32. Refreshment of memory by Anghwyr · · Score: 5, Informative

    There was an example on a ruby conference earlier this year: http://dyepot-teapot.com/2009/04/25/dear-fellow-rubyists/

    “If he had left it at a few introductory jokes, I would be writing a very different post. Instead the porn references continued with images of scantily-clad women gratuitously splashed across technical diagrams and intro slides. As he got into code snippets, he inserted interstitial images every few slides.

    1. Re:Refreshment of memory by steve.howard · · Score: 1

      So one guy's presentation was tasteless and crass. I'm a man, and I don't want porn in my programming reference materials (I would assume that even the biggest fan of porn would find it weird at the least that that was in a Ruby presentation. Java, maybe).

    2. Re:Refreshment of memory by baronben · · Score: 4, Informative

      Okay, let's try an example from a Debian commentor called MikeeUSA

      The women of the “geek feminism” movement will be just as effective at excising men from the movement as Nina was at systematically destroying Hans Reiser’s life untill he saw no reason, nothing left in his life, that could hold him back from striking back.

      Ouch.

      And also

      Yea you’ve become a developer and have done nearly nothing except shill your feminist shit and try to turn debian into a woman’s project (you are succeeding, men are leaving debian because of you and your ilk, worthless bitch).

      examples taken from Geek Feminism

    3. Re:Refreshment of memory by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      So a few bad apples spoiled the whole cart?

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    4. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wait, I'm confused. Racism is when one person disparages an entire group of people based on nothing more than their race. So, how does sexism translate to mentioning a fondness for women, pornography or anything like that?

      If someone says, "ya know, broads are pretty thick so we might need to dumb this down for them" then that's sexist. But, simply saying, "I like chicks and I think talking about sex is a good metaphor" is not sexist.

    5. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If females cannot come to terms with the prevalence of porn and its importance to the male demographic, then they are bringing their own sexism to the table. I get that they are going to have their own individual value judgments to make about it, but expecting others to pretend that it doesn't exist, or expecting all males to be embarrassed about it and never bring it up in public, is neither realistic, nor fair, nor tolerant.

      I get that people were unhappy with this presentation. I would have been one of them. That doesn't make it sexist or bad. People just aren't always happy with how others choose to behave, and they don't have to be.

    6. Re:Refreshment of memory by maroberts · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes, and as was pointed out in the article you linked to, he was banned from the Debian bug tracking system and others. The guy seems to be a general abuser of women in general, not an example of geek abuse of women.

      --

      Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
      Karma: Chameleon

    7. Re:Refreshment of memory by baronben · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, I don't think anyone said that. Though, you know, it would be nice if people realized that it is generally a bad thing for people to be able to make death threats against women without being called on it. Because these things escalate.

      Here's the thing. We all want open source to succeed and grow bigger. That mean getting more developers and more users. But, if someone with a name like Cindy or Susan tries to contribute to a program and they're met with responses that treat them differently because of their gender, FOSS is going to run into problems.

    8. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, the last part I can kind of understand.

      OSS projects are for coding. I don't really care if you're a man, woman, or cat that somehow managed to learn to use a keyboard. People are valued in OSS projects for their coding contributions. I'm not really surprised that people with an agenda not relating to getting things done don't get a pleasant welcome.

      Note that I don't have any issues with anybody at all participanting. Whether a man, woman, or alien, computer, or brain in a vat, come and code.

      But I don't think something like this should really exist in something like Debian. There shouldn't be a "Debian Women", "Debian LGBT", "Debian Minusvalids" or "Debian Furries" project not because it's somehow wrong for such people to participate (I belong to one of the listed categories), but because such things should be completely irrelevant and everybody should be only judged by the value of the code, art, etc they contribute.

    9. Re:Refreshment of memory by dlgeek · · Score: 5, Informative

      You're calling MikeUSA a Debian commentator? He's a troll who got banned from all the Debian mailing lists. Calling him a Debian commentator makes it sound like he's somehow associated with the project, rather than shunned by it.

    10. Re:Refreshment of memory by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In the example you are giving, I believe it is not sexism. It is either a huge troll (of terrible taste) or some guy who is actually needing psychiatric help. Badly so.

      Sexism is more insidious. And harder to detect for sure because what is considered acceptable (even expected/polite) flirting in some cultures is seen as assault in others. This is a side effect of men and women relationship having different connotations as men-men or women-women. For obvious reasons.

      I suppose a reasonable code of conduct is about clearly separating "work" -- in the case of OSS the technical contributions and the value thereof, and "play" -- the interactions you may have with other humans for the sake of friendship/seduction. And that goes both ways: you should not get easily offended (after all the internet is full of hormone-filled education-deficient adolescents, and being sensitive is a recipe for unhappiness), but you should strive for not -- ever -- putting in a single posting/mail/RL discussion both "work" and "play".

      Marks of technical appreciation are of course OK.

      And yes, try to be culturally sensitive. This means that you should expect people to get offended by innocent/friendly remarks. Apologise and don't do it again, this is not an attack on you and your culture (most of the time ;) ). Again, this goes both ways: pointing out you found such and such remark disturbing is fine, and helps communication, but let go -- if not a jerk, the offending party will apologise and not do it again.

      In the end, I guess what I try to say is "don't be a jerk", tolerate other people's mistakes, and learn from yours. It's a global world and communicating across cultures is hard.

    11. Re:Refreshment of memory by Svartalf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I will probably be down-modded because this is emotionally charged stuff we're talking about here. What I am about to state is going to probably be unpopular with some of the crowd here on this forum.

      We don't know the rationale of the comment about the Reiser story. Someone could be goaded into that sort of thing as described in the comment. I can't say I wholly agree with MikeeUSA's commentary about Nina Reiser- nor can I comment either way on his assessment of the story. I know from personal experience that the world isn't being told the whole truth on this subject- and people that're less strong than I was have snapped at the treatment they received there.

      I'll point to the previous comment I just made in this post with regards to the other comment you bring up. If you need to use a label of "Feminism" then you should reconsider your thinking- the bulk of that which labels itself "feminist" are very much guilty of abuse that is honestly unacceptable going back the other way. If you want to see sexism, all one has to do is look back at the Feminist crowd to see sterling, stalwart examples thereof. While MikeeUSA's comments may be over the top- there is some basis thereof for a counter response back the other way.

      Now before anyone tries to label me a misogynist or a sexist pig (Of which, I am neither...), I will offer some good examples of what I am talking to:

      The SCUM Manifesto by Valerie Solanas.

      "All men are rapists and that's all they are" -- Marilyn French, Authoress; (later, advisoress to Al Gore's Presidential Campaign.)

      "Since marriage constitutes slavery for women, it is clear that the women's movement must concentrate on attacking this institution. Freedom for women cannot be won without the abolition of marriage." -- Sheila Cronin, prominent member of NOW

      "The most merciful thing a family can do to one of its infant members is to kill it." Margaret Sanger - founder of planned parenthood

      "If life is to survive on this planet, there must be a decontamination of the Earth. I think this will be accompanied by an evolutionary process that will result in a drastic reduction of the population of males." --Mary Daly, former Professor at Boston College, 2001

      There's tons more examples, but that sort of stuff, folks, is what Feminism appears to be all about from their public presence and proclamations and past actions in public- after all, these ARE their luminaries talking with those examples I've given. No rational discourse is typically possible at that point- no sanity present within any of this stuff. It's all about feelings and don't confuse them with the facts, they know what they feel and what they feel is the Truth of the matter. If you don't believe me, all you need do is run afoul of someone in that crowd and you'll be on the receiving end of all of it, male or female- and there will be no shifting them from their "thoughts" on the matter.

      Anyone that has ran afoul of this sort of crowd will attest that it's damned easy to arrive at a line of thought like MikeeUSA has expressed. Odds are, he's been on the receiving end of it and has had enough- but doesn't know how to express it in any other way than the way he has. Sure, it's not constructive, but then neither has any of the bulk of the Feminist crowd either- and whenever "sexist" comes up, I always go looking for the cause. And, I've always found that the aphorism of "where there's smoke there is fire" really applies to any of these cases- the smoke or squeaky wheel's guilty of the same sort of thought process that the examples of Feminism have arrived at and publicly stated. ...and we've been pavlov trained to react to it whenever it gets broached in the manner everyone keeps doing, even now, whether or not there's actually any basis whatsoever in the accusations being flung.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    12. Re:Refreshment of memory by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Actually watch that slideshow. The first 5slides are about guys and over all it has almost as many guy slides as girl slides. Crass and inappropriate yes, sexist maybe not? I don't know the guy. But I'm sure a stuck up guy could complain about the first slide showing a muscle bound guy, crotch censored and talking about size being important. Lets go with sexist to both genders? I'm an equalist not a feminist and this doesn't really offend me at all. Damn stupid for a presentation but not particularly imbalanced.

      Also as mentioned it was one thing and a small group if that's the best you've got we are fucking golden. Hell my dad is a lawyer and in the courtroom I hear more imbalanced women directed comments in an average day. (Most because there are a lot of older lawyers)

    13. Re:Refreshment of memory by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Assholes abound. Did the Debian community support these guys? Did their comments get a following or were they condemned by both guys and girls of the debian community. I think that's your answer.

    14. Re:Refreshment of memory by ojustgiveitup · · Score: 1

      Hooray! Thank you for the first comment so far with real examples and a link we can check out for further research (for those of us who are curious about the issue and uninformed)

    15. Re:Refreshment of memory by gmack · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think this is the most valid point of the whole debate. I remember hating it in school when they would have a bit push to protect X minority/ perpetual victim group because the problem was never the person who need protection and the people who picked on them simply moved on to someone else.

      At some point people need to realize that the problem is the bullies and we tolerate far too much in the FOSS world. I understand that technical environments can be brutal but attacking anything other than the code quality, format or it's license should be considered off limits.

      Imagine how much easier life would be for everyone if we started taking action against people who feel the need to abuse others.

    16. Re:Refreshment of memory by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      That's what the metaphor means, that a little bit of rotten goes a long ways.

      Tolerating bad apples is probably a bigger factor than anything. There are jerks in every profession, but normally people don't put up with it. Someone takes them aside and tells them to straighten up, or they can't manage to hold a job, etc. But when everyone just looks the other way, or say "but he's a great coder", then the rot sets in.

      It's about professionalism; you act a certain way at work even if it's against your normal nature. You are expected to be a representative for your company/organization, and more broadly a representative for the profession itself. When the professionalism goes away, then stereotypes pop up; such as "those XYZ programmers are just a bunch of rock star wannabes".

      I've found it true for me that when there is a higher percentage of women in an organization or department, the more professional it feels. When I've been (rarely) in departments with all men it definitely has a locker room feel, there's a lot more swearing at code being heard over the cubicle walls, etc.

      So when it comes to sexism, the big problem is that it only takes a few people to cause an entire industry to get a bad reputation. The more people that just excuse bad behavior with "you can't expect everyone to be a saint at a conference", the more the bad attitude spreads. It also means the bad apples feel they have more leeway next time. It doesn't matter if you think some people are prudes, or people need to grow thicker skins, some things are just not very professional.

    17. Re:Refreshment of memory by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that woman are inherently offended by porn of either gender, naked man and woman? That their fragile little selves can't handle such topics without fainting? And you're calling the presenter a sexist? The presentation was inappropriate but trying to say it was sexist only makes you look like one.

    18. Re:Refreshment of memory by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1

      So a few bad apples spoiled the whole cart?

      How many "bad apples" are needed before they become evidence of the tendencies of their group?

    19. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      What I quoted is the response of a girl present at that conference. I just remembered that something like this hit the blogs a few months ago and googled for it.

      Khasim was asking for examples. This is one where a girl was offended by it. Doesn't say anything about inherently offending all women.

    20. Re:Refreshment of memory by nomadic · · Score: 1
      I can't say I wholly agree with MikeeUSA's commentary about Nina Reiser- nor can I comment either way on his assessment of the story.

      Well I can safely say I wholly disagree with MikeeUSA's idiocy. Hans Reiser is a sociopath. If a relationship is bothering you enough, end it.

      The SCUM Manifesto by Valerie Solanas.

      Solanas was an extremely disturbed paranoid schizophrenic, not a feminist philosopher.

      "All men are rapists and that's all they are" -- Marilyn French, Authoress; (later, advisoress to Al Gore's Presidential Campaign.)

      Only that's misleading; a character in one of her novels said this line, and attributing it to the author is dishonest.

      "Since marriage constitutes slavery for women, it is clear that the women's movement must concentrate on attacking this institution. Freedom for women cannot be won without the abolition of marriage." -- Sheila Cronin, prominent member of NOW

      Not too prominent; a google search finds very little, and most of that is linked to your quote.

      "The most merciful thing a family can do to one of its infant members is to kill it." Margaret Sanger - founder of planned parenthood

      I fail to see how that supports your point; she is not targeting men here.
      There's tons more examples, but that sort of stuff, folks, is what Feminism appears to be all about from their public presence and proclamations and past actions in public

      Then you don't know much about feminism, cherry-picked quotes aside.

    21. Re:Refreshment of memory by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Yea you've become a developer and have done nearly nothing except shill your feminist shit and try to turn debian into a woman's project (you are succeeding, men are leaving debian because of you and your ilk, worthless bitch).

      Is it bad that my first thought on reading that was "Well, let's see her code?"

    22. Re:Refreshment of memory by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Then it's not sexism, you can't have it both ways. If he'd preached about Jesus and offended a Buddhist girl would you call THAT sexist as well?

    23. Re:Refreshment of memory by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      It's no different than what's passing for evidence of "sexism" in FOSS right at the moment. It's all cherry picked there too- and we're pillorying the people that're challenging it as being "in denial" or "misogynistic", with little to no basis for the remarks. Seriously.

      Unfortunately, for my story, the "cherry picked quotes" I put forward seem to permeate throughout most of my encounters with alleged Feminsts. While I offer anecdotes, my personal experience matches what I've posted above- and I can only offer what I've seen, experienced or read on the subject over the years. Sure, Solanas was a seriously disturbed individual. How can you relate the remark from Marylin French as being any less disturbed...or the changing of the name "woman" to "womyn", "because 'woman' has 'man' in it's making" as anything but disturbed?

      I'd say that the Feminst crowd need to clean house a bit and actively discourage that sort of conduct (which is NOT happening...believe me it's not...) before they have any sort of room to claim "sexist" on other things.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    24. Re:Refreshment of memory by blueskies · · Score: 1

      Isn't that the point? When an apple goes bad it's ethylene production skyrockets spoiling/ripening all of the surrounding apples.

      So, yes. If FOSS is like apples which *you* are implying, then a few bad apples would ruin the whole cart. I'm not so sure FOSS is like an apple cart, but if you want to make the analogy then sure it would fit your analogy that a few bad ones would spoil them all.

    25. Re:Refreshment of memory by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Hey, mainstream media does it all the time! If it's not acceptable, why do they get to do it?

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    26. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If FOSS is like apples which *you* are implying, then a few bad apples would ruin the whole cart.

      No, I'm not implying that. I'm pointing out the absurdity of implying such a thing. That is what the post I was responding to is implying. The point was, the metaphor does not make sense here. Sexism is not some kind of infection.

      See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_charity

    27. Re:Refreshment of memory by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      OSS projects are for coding, but they develop a strong group atmosphere. This atmosphere could be to blame and its worth it to stay vigilant of examples of it being so.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    28. Re:Refreshment of memory by Ifni · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are absolutely right - there is a profound problem of sexism in FOSS. And the entire community implicitly supports this sexism by not having a psych screening for every potential member before they are allowed to join the community. This injustice must be righted forthwith!

      [/sarcasm]

      Seriously, there are sexists. They exist in all walks of life. Having found a handful of them in any given community is not evidence of a pronounced problem in that community. If it was a significant or majority behavior, you would have a point. But it isn't, and you don't.

      I will admit that such behavior should not be overlooked. The INDIVIDUALS responsible should be taken to task, preferably by the community, and if warranted, even ostracized. But to blame the community for actions that it does not condone by one of its members (or even a vanishingly small percentage of its members) is absurd.

      And while you are thinking about a presentation featuring scantily clad females, watch some TV and notice that SEX SELLS. If you are presenting to a room (mostly) full of men, you have three sure fire ways to maintain their attention - booze, sports, and women. Booze is expensive, considering the audience, sports perhaps isn't all that surefire, so that leaves women. Okay, perhaps a better way would have been to have an engaging presentation with interesting content, but not all geeks are professional presenters. An admonition and a slap on the wrist is an appropriate response to such insensitive behavior (for a first offense), but assigning this to sexism (rather than red-blooded maleness and a small dose of ignorance) is disingenuous at best.

      He's not responsible for the low percentage of women in FOSS (or any computer science field), he's just using that fact to his advantage by tailoring his presentation to his audience. Poorly, I admit, but you don't go to Black Hat and get offended when the inevitable Microsoft bashing begins. Or any entertainment or infotech convention and not expect to see booth babes. Is it right? Perhaps not, but so long as the audience is male by a vast majority, this isn't likely to change. Men like to see sexy young women. You give your audience what they want and they come back next year, or buy your product, whatever. The logical outcome isn't very hard to predict.

      Am I defending him? Absolutely not, but I can see how the mistake was made. But showing pictures of women to an audience he likely assumed would be 100% men does not earn a death sentence. None of us would ever make it to adulthood if we were held to such draconian "every injustice deserves the death sentence" justice. Even sexual harassment laws are more forgiving. The offended party should inform the offender that what they are doing is offensive as the offender may not even realize it. Then, if the behavior continues, they can be reported to a higher authority for remediation. This whole sexism in FOSS business is people immediately shouting every small infraction to the world. Do you want to know why we aren't taking it seriously? Read the fable of the boy who cried wolf. That's what's happening here. The offended need to grow a thicker skin, try to resolve the issue privately with the offender, and then, as a last resort, go to the community (which, ironically, is the same community they are besmirching unfairly, which makes me think this isn't about fairness, but about some political agenda). As evidenced here (on Slashdot - not the friendliest or most sympathetic community by any stretch), you will find sympathy for your cause, which shows that the problem is not endemic to the community as a whole, which is the whole argument I've been making from the start.

      --

      Oh, was that my outside voice?

    29. Re:Refreshment of memory by nomadic · · Score: 1

      . Sure, Solanas was a seriously disturbed individual. How can you relate the remark from Marylin French as being any less disturbed...

      Ummm...Novel. Character. Fiction.

      I'd say that the Feminst crowd need to clean house a bit and actively discourage that sort of conduct (which is NOT happening...believe me it's not...) before they have any sort of room to claim "sexist" on other things.

      Only...it is. Google second wave feminism vs. third wave feminism.

    30. Re:Refreshment of memory by dissy · · Score: 1

      Hey, mainstream media does it all the time! If it's not acceptable, why do they get to do it?

      Because them doing it or not has no reflection on if it is acceptable.
      It's not acceptable despite the media doing it. It would be equally not acceptable if the media did not do it.

      The real question is, why do YOU feel it is acceptable, and that 'the media does it' is a legit excuse for you?

    31. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Treated differently != sexism. Sometimes women are merely being treated like men treat each other but gender just happens to come up as a subject. I mean, in conflict we are basically programmed to pick up the nearest rock and throw it and if the opponent's gender happens to be one of those rocks then it's just going to get thrown. To add insult to injury, men are expected to listen to women complain about their periods, the jerky men they date, etc. and not respond with any displeasure, even in a work environment. And even worse, try entering an all-woman environment and see how often the women will gang up on you for being a man. I watched an entire department conspire to undermine my authority because I was in charge of some gift baskets that we were giving out to clients and the baskets just happened to contain chocolate. I had a very limited budget to do so and barely had enough for everyone we HAD to give them to but since I didn't have the same addiction to chocolate as they did, they decided to create a phantom client and they took a basket to "give it to them". Ten minutes later they give me the basket back emptied of chocolate just to show me they could "trick" me into giving it to them. I wasn't fooled at all with their thinly veiled ruse and actually used it in evidence to get every one of them fired over the next 2 months. It ceased being an all-woman sales department after that and our sales increased about 75%. Sure that's merely an anecdote but just try to tell a woman that perhaps the pain she feels is NOT the worst pain in the world and see how quickly she tells you how stupid you are.

    32. Re:Refreshment of memory by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's a bad thing to make death threats toward people... but you have to ask yourself, do you really feel threatened by a computer screen? Think about the alternative. zero free speech where everyone is censored, monitored and arrested for making such claims. If you use your real name on a forum, you may want to think twice next time you register. I'm not entirely backing someone who "made a threat" (because I read it mainly as a snarky comment as opposed to a threat per say) but you have to understand that there are limits to an online interaction. If you find that someone is stalking you in real life. Grab a phone and call 911. Personal defense classes and/or exercising your right to personal defense (in the US: carrying a gun) is also an option if you truly feel threatened. Otherwise, move on and don't give the troll more free advertisement.

      I think people are reaching into the woodwork and pulling out every major flaw of humanity and putting it on a wall for everyone to see. Of course, they are placing it on whatever wall they feel like and blaming every other piece of furniture in the room.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    33. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not according to the Osmonds.

    34. Re:Refreshment of memory by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

      Is it so fucking difficult? If you want to seriously show tendencies in a group of say a million people, then you need at least 501k examples; probably more. Other than that then you need to do proper statistical sampling. That means

      • Get a random sample of FOSS people
      • demonstrate clearly that there is no bias in your selection
      • characterise those people clearly; link them to companies / organisations /projects etc.
      • measure things about them
      • survey attitudes within your group.
      • demonstrate that your survey results really represent true attitudes
      • gather results and do proper statistical analysis on them including error bars

      Yes, it's a load of hard work, but that's what's needed before someone starts spouting off.

      Until this debate I have been absolutely convinced that there is continual sexism in engineering/computing areas. Simply because I've been involved in recruiting decisions often enough to know how many of the managers think. However, looking at the pathetic inability of people here to understand basic statistics and the scientific method is really making me re-think.

      Please stop posting this statistically incorrect crap and start actually doing some worthwhile research.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    35. Re:Refreshment of memory by rtfa-troll · · Score: 2, Informative

      How can you relate the remark from Marylin French as being any less disturbed.

      The grandparent pointed out that this was a quote from a novel. You continue to hold it against the author. Do you go around demanding Thomas Harris be arrested for cannibalism because Hannibal Lecter recommends taking packed lunches with human brains whenever travelling by air? Are you insane?

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    36. Re:Refreshment of memory by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      But, if someone with a name like Cindy or Susan tries to contribute to a program and they're met with responses that treat them differently because of their gender, FOSS is going to run into problems.

      True, but Cindy and Susan need to understand that guys don't get a free pass because they're part of an ol' boys network. If I tried to submit a crappy patch, I'd expect to get flamed because my code was bad. If Cindy or Susan tried the same and get flamed, then it might very well be because their code was bad and not because they're women.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    37. Re:Refreshment of memory by LaserLine · · Score: 1

      Svartalf, I'm sorry, but you FAILED and the reason is very simple. You took a several oneliner quotes to paint a picture of what Feminism is and you are wrong. News organization do it all the time. For example, they'll edit interviews, so that only the "good/juicy" sound bites or images get in, but miss the real message the interviewee was trying to convey. There's tons more examples, but that sort of stuff, folks, is what Feminism appears to be all about from their public presence and proclamations and past actions in public- after all, these ARE their luminaries talking with those examples I've given. No rational discourse is typically possible at that point- no sanity present within any of this stuff. It's all about feelings and don't confuse them with the facts, they know what they feel and what they feel is the Truth of the matter. If you don't believe me, all you need do is run afoul of someone in that crowd and you'll be on the receiving end of all of it, male or female- and there will be no shifting them from their "thoughts" on the matter. I'm sure there are "tons more examples"... you can find practically anything on the Internet to match your point of view, but you're missing the point. Even some of the quotes you mentioned are taking out of context and you should really put a date on those quotes as well because some of those quotes had different meaning the time they were said. But to answer your quote above, I have met feminists before. In fact, I learned all about Feminism as well as met many feminists at University because I took a class on it and guess what, Feminism is really vast and there are many different types of Feminist/ism. Hell, there are even people who are anti-abortion who call themselves Feminist which if you look at your history within the feminist movement and understand what Feminism really is you'll find that it is an oxymoron, but examples like that are just one example of how vast it is. You have clearly demonstrating a clear lack of understanding of what feminism is and have been modded up by people who also have a clear lack of understanding as well because what you're saying is not insightful at all. What you're saying is wrong for the simple reason that you're taking quotes from different time periods and taking them out of context to illustrate your scewed point of a misrepresentation of what feminism is.

    38. Re:Refreshment of memory by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There shouldn't be a "Debian Women", "Debian LGBT", "Debian Minusvalids" or "Debian Furries" project not because it's somehow wrong for such people to participate (I belong to one of the listed categories), but because such things should be completely irrelevant and everybody should be only judged by the value of the code, art, etc they contribute.

      Except that that's not the way the world works. People are in fact judged by gender, orientation, race, etcetera, in our society; and those who are (mis)judged by those criteria naturally will band together for support.

      It may not be as bad inside our little enclave of coders (or, actually, it might: I've certainly seen asinine sexist behavior), but when you live in a muddy environment you're going to track mud through the house occasionally. We live in a nation where a political writer can get away with suggesting that women's suffrage might be a mistake, so let's not even pretend that sexism isn't an issue in our broader culture.

      After a couple of decades, it might be possible for "Debian Women" to work themselves out of a job. This recently happened in the martial arts system I belong to, when it was decided that there were enough women in both total enrollment and in the senior ranks that it was no longer necessary to have a special "women's seminar" every year. But the reason that things reached the point that sexism was so reduced in significance was because there was this extra support system in place.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    39. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Except that that's not the way the world works. People are in fact judged by gender, orientation, race, etcetera, in our society; and those who are (mis)judged by those criteria naturally will band together for support.

      But most OSS projects don't work through face to face conversations.

      When I post to a mailing list I don't add to each post my gender, orientation, race and so on, and in fact I think doing so would be in bad taste as it'd imply that it somehow makes my code different. I also don't post about my real life, or how I socialize, as none of that has anything to do with coding.

      After a couple of decades, it might be possible for "Debian Women" to work themselves out of a job. This recently happened in the martial arts system I belong to, when it was decided that there were enough women in both total enrollment and in the senior ranks that it was no longer necessary to have a special "women's seminar" every year. But the reason that things reached the point that sexism was so reduced in significance was because there was this extra support system in place.

      That's very good to hear. But it's not really the sort of thing I'm talking about.

      In an OSS project most people don't know your gender, age, location, political inclinations and so on. So why would you explicitly start a movement emphasizing one of those things, as if it said something about the quality of your code? Just contribute, and get respect, or lack of it according to your contributions.

    40. Re:Refreshment of memory by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      But most OSS projects don't work through face to face conversations.

      I believe that many, if not most, OSS projects do have conferences and other get-togthers, at least for the project leaders.

      Google hits for: Linux conference = 36,700,000

      Google hits for: Apache conference = 5,970,000

      Google hits for: PHP conference = 65,100,000

      And of course many people are drawn into the F/OSS world by exposure via classes or LUGs or other meatspace interactions.

      So why would you explicitly start a movement emphasizing one of those things, as if it said something about the quality of your code?

      Why would you think that belonging to such a group was intended as a statement about the quality of one's code?

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    41. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      I believe that many, if not most, OSS projects do have conferences and other get-togthers, at least for the project leaders.

      Well, sure, I've been to those. But when at a convention I don't yell at random the name under which I submit code. And when I meet somebody face to face I don't then start telling people about what we did at $CONVENTION at the -devel mailing list. I just get back to coding. If I communicate on personal matters I do it through outside channels.

      Why would you think that belonging to such a group was intended as a statement about the quality of one's code?

      Why would somebody make such a group otherwise?

      I wrote this post without looking at your username. I don't know if you might be male or female, or somebody I talked to before. It doesn't matter to me.

      When despite my attempts to ignore your RL self you insist in shoving some of it into my face, I can't help but thinking you think it's somehow relevant to getting coding done, because that's what a software project is about. To me, it's as weird as if somebody made a group of Debian users with large noses. It can't possibly have any relevance for anything Debian related, yet for some reason somebody thought the shape of one's nose has some relevance in the Debian community.

    42. Re:Refreshment of memory by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      Sexism and FOSS are orthogonal. Conflating the two doesn't help FOSS and it doesn't reduce sexism.
      All kinds of sexism should be called out. Any decent person will agree.
      Headlines including "FOSS" and "sexism" sends the wrong signal, and makes FOSS supporters defensive.
      It smells of trolling.
      Instead of calling out FOSS, let's call out individuals and their comments - in context (it's easy to mischaracterize some comments by using snippets, or taking then out of context).
      If members of a particular community want to take some kind of action (appropriate in some cases) then that's up to them. But don't try to make out like FOSS encourages sexism. FOSS is a community of individuals. Individuals can be sexist. Period.

    43. Re:Refreshment of memory by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      But when at a convention I don't yell at random the name under which I submit code.

      Irrelevant.

      If I communicate on personal matters I do it through outside channels.

      Unless you take great pains, you communicate your gender (and your race/ethnicity) to anyone who views you..

      Why would somebody make such a group otherwise?

      For mutual support when bigotry is encoutered, for simple human interest when it isn't.

      To me, it's as weird as if somebody made a group of Debian users with large noses. It can't possibly have any relevance for anything Debian related, yet for some reason somebody thought the shape of one's nose has some relevance in the Debian community.

      In a world where some people thought that the shape of one's nose had some relevance to the quality of one's creative output, the shape of one's nose would affect a person's experience. (Even within the Debian community.) People who have a similar life experience tend to group together. There is absolutely nothing weird about that.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    44. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Irrelevant.

      Not irrelevent. My point is that when I'm attending a convention, most people don't know who I am. So going to one doesn't automatically everyone aware of what I look like. In fact nobody may find out if I don't say it.

      Unless you take great pains, you communicate your gender (and your race/ethnicity) to anyone who views you..

      By outside channels I mean things like IRC. I mean I don't discuss non-coding matters on development channels and lists. Most people don't either.

      And even when meeting somebody in person I don't bring that meeting into the development list.

      For mutual support when bigotry is encoutered, for simple human interest when it isn't.

      Such things should never be brought to a project in the first place.

      The only ontopic thing should be code. Things like porn, gender, race and nationality should be all offtopic in the first place, so bigotry shouldn't happen except on technological subjects, because there would never be a legitimate reason to mention such things in the first place.

      By the same token, support groups would be also offtopic.

    45. Re:Refreshment of memory by agnosticnixie · · Score: 2, Informative

      Bullshit, every damn OSS project is steeped in politics over its head.

    46. Re:Refreshment of memory by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      The only people who get exposed to the SCUM manifesto are whiny men who go out of their way to seek it, she was a strawman and nothing more, the only feminists who listened to Solanas were in mental institutions and prisons and never had the slightest influence, while you defend the view of a man who defended something like the Montreal Polytechnic shooting. You are scum of the lowest order, trying to defend your views as "reaction".

    47. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      OSS projects produce code, but that code is produced by human beings with egos and feelings and shit. If you forget that, you won't be a very effective team and will lose talent who might have made great contributions to your project.

    48. Re:Refreshment of memory by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      When I post to a mailing list I don't add to each post my gender, orientation, race and so on,

      Sure, but say your email address is rosita.gonzales@yahoo.es...Right there we can probably figure out that you're a Spanish woman, right?

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    49. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      You can, but it's very easy to get a guess like that wrong.

      The country I usually post from isn't the country I was born in.

      The domain I post from is usually an US one, which is neither where I was born, nor where I live permanently, nor where I'm located.

      Ocassionally I travel, so I may post from a country where I neither live permanently or was born in.

      Then, it's not that rare to find somebody posting under a name that looks like real one but really isn't, due to things like gender issues and sex reassignment.

      With spanish speaking countries you could be born in one, move to another, and post from an address in the third.

      There's a guy in the Perl community who goes by "Abigail". I have ocassionally used nicknames that sound female but actually are a reference to something else entirely.

      And really, who cares? Good code is good code, and bad code is bad code, no matter who it came from.

    50. Re:Refreshment of memory by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      While I do wonder if what you said about SRS was meant to imply that transwoman aren't "real women," I just want to point out that acting differently toward someone based on the perception that they're female is no different than doing it on the knowledge that they're female. Both are sexist.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    51. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Not the point I was trying to make, no. And SRS isn't instant. External appearance doesn't necessarily indicate what somebody wishes to be like.

      You said "Right there we can probably figure out that you're a Spanish woman, right?"

      My point was that no, it might not be a woman, or spanish.

      From the name, it could be a mexican living in spain, or using an account they got there. It could be a woman, somebody who looks physically like a man but who thinks they should look like a woman, a husband using a wife's account, somebody using a friend's account, somebody roleplaying using a persona (eg, somebody who created "Aerie, High Priestess of Mystra" in a RPG, then used it as a handle for development work), a man wondering what kind of reception women get...

      It's trivial to get any email address you want, for any name, on any TLD. Making assumptions based on that is just not useful.

    52. Re:Refreshment of memory by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Well I'd argue that "somebody who looks physically like a man but who thinks they should look like a woman" is a category of "woman," but anyway...

      Ok, yes, there may be other reasons to use the account name, but what is the most likely *perception*? Hispanic woman, I'm guessing. So the question is, based on that perception (whether right or wrong) would the poster be treated differently?

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    53. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am SOOOO starting the "Debian Furries" group..

    54. Re:Refreshment of memory by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > But, if someone with a name like Cindy or Susan tries
      > to contribute to a program and they're met with responses
      > that treat them differently because of their gender

      So pull a George Elliot: use a pseudonym that doesn't make your gender so obvious right off the bat. Let people get familiar with your work and see its quality. They can deal with your gender a few years later when you're asked to speak at a conference or something. This strategy works: is there anyone left at this point who still thinks women can't write literature?

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    55. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Well I'd argue that "somebody who looks physically like a man but who thinks they should look like a woman" is a category of "woman," but anyway...

      I agree actually

      Ok, yes, there may be other reasons to use the account name, but what is the most likely *perception*? Hispanic woman, I'm guessing. So the question is, based on that perception (whether right or wrong) would the poster be treated differently?

      I have no clue what americans mean by "hispanic" actually. I worked at companies where pretty much everybody was from a different country, and they all look the same to me, with the exception of really obvious differences like large differences in skin color. I can't tell a bulgarian from a mexican.

      Anyway. First, like I said I consider online impressions to be unreliable. Even if for some reason I cared about somebody's gender, online I can't get any accurate information about it, so I would postpone any related decisions until getting a definite conformation in person. Only reason I can see to care about somebody's gender is a romantic interest on my part, which is squarely outside the scope of getting technical things done and IMO entirely legitimate for that purpose. I consider such things inappropiate in settings like a development mailing list though.

      When technical subjects are involved, such things are irrelevant and people shouldn't be treated differently because of it. Code is good or bad regardless of who wrote it.

      Also, the idea that computers are a male thing seems recent. If you search for photos of ancient computers like the ENIAC, the people who program them are pretty much all women, and the computing field owes much to Ada Lovelace and Grace Hopper.

    56. Re:Refreshment of memory by garote · · Score: 1

      If it was a significant or majority behavior, you would have a point. But it isn't, and you don't.

      Ooo, good one.

      ... to blame the community for actions that it does not condone by one of its members (or even a vanishingly small percentage of its members) is absurd.

      That's the trouble. "Not condoning" something is not the same as "not accepting" it. In general, sexist behavior is accepted, because it's ignored. Patently moronic statements are left to fester unchallenged on message boards because, basically, no one - or almost no one - cares. More directly, overbearing socially maladapted twits will ping and pester a female code contributor PRIMARILY for reasons unrelated to the code she contributes. You clearly have no idea how incredibly frustrating that is.

      And while you are thinking about a presentation featuring scantily clad females, watch some TV and notice that SEX SELLS. If you are presenting to a room (mostly) full of men, you have three sure fire ways to maintain their attention - booze, sports, and women. Booze is expensive, considering the audience, sports perhaps isn't all that surefire, so that leaves women. Okay, perhaps a better way would have been to have an engaging presentation with interesting content, but not all geeks are professional presenters. An admonition and a slap on the wrist is an appropriate response to such insensitive behavior (for a first offense), but assigning this to sexism (rather than red-blooded maleness and a small dose of ignorance) is disingenuous at best.

      Yes, sex sells, and it gets attention, and dumbass presenters will leverage that to attract interest. But the advertising and sale of sex has obvious repercussions. Suppose your daughter's grade-school textbook was splashed with lurid snapshots of bimbos in lipstick, for the sake of "holding the attention" of her male classmates. Suppose she had to look at that shit every night, for an hour, as she did her homework. Would you just shrug your shoulders and say "well, men like boobies, that's the way it goes"?

      Then why do you shrug your shoulders when that crap happens at work? I don't know where YOU work, but in my workplace, if a presenter scattered nude women into a slide show, internal or external, the presentation would be STOPPED COLD and the presenter would be reprimanded severely, and quite possibly fired that very day. And that's the way it should be. It would cause too much strife among our engineers to do otherwise.

      Seriously... You state that this is not evidence of sexism ... but "red-blooded maleness"? You have just jumped over your own personal shark.

      Read the fable of the boy who cried wolf. That's what's happening here. The offended need to grow a thicker skin, try to resolve the issue privately with the offender, and then, as a last resort, go to the community (which, ironically, is the same community they are besmirching unfairly, which makes me think this isn't about fairness, but about some political agenda).

      An issue like this should not have to be resolved privately with the offender. The offender should be shouted down by his peers for being a complete moron. There is no "political agenda" on tap here, Mr. "boy who cried wolf", this is a matter of common sense.

      As evidenced here (on Slashdot - not the friendliest or most sympathetic community by any stretch), you will find sympathy for your cause, which shows that the problem is not endemic to the community as a whole, which is the whole argument I've been making from the start.

      So the system is not broken because some people acknowledge the system is broken? What?

    57. Re:Refreshment of memory by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      Is it so fucking difficult? If you want to seriously show tendencies in a group of say a million people, then you need at least 501k examples; probably more. Other than that then you need to do proper statistical sampling.

      Ooooh, this is gonna be my first Darwin ever...I feel so proud of myself.

      Do you honestly believe that more than 50% of all germans felt it was right and proper to cart off a couple of million Jews to to concentration camps? Or was all it took that they stood by and watched a small minority of them actually do it?

      You may understand statistics, but I can't help but feel you don't get...you know...the human beings that make up those statistics. All it takes for evil...

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    58. Re:Refreshment of memory by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Well the problem is not everyone is like you :) And yeah, apparently a lot of women left computing in the 80s if you look at the percentages over time. Used to be an Old Girls Club :P

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    59. Re:Refreshment of memory by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      I don't think my attitude is that rare.

      If you look at a mailing list for a large project, pretty much all of it is about code. People post code, review patches, argue about what should be done, how, and why.

      When people get personal it's almost always for a code related reason. Eg, some people's comments may be badly received, not because they post under a particular name from a particular TLD, but because in the past they've shown themselves to be unreliable, overly uncompromising, or hard to work with.

      I also find that in this field it's hard to speak to somebody you don't know without unintentionally offending them. People have diverse backgrounds, with very varying levels of knowledge that aren't always immediately obvious. What a newbie might find enlightening, an expert who has been quietly lurking and not showing the extent of their knowledge may find insulting. Sometimes people may take offense at the attempt to determine the extent of their knowledge.

    60. Re:Refreshment of memory by xappax · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's an interesting point, but sometimes, you have to draw attention to a particular kind of "bullying" because most people don't even realize it's going on. Maybe they're not even doing it on purpose, they just never stopped to think. For example, if I'm American and so are all the other coders I know, we're not necessarily going to notice if we're doing things in a way that are inconvenient or annoying or offensive to people from other cultures or parts of the world.

      Often, we don't fully get these things even when someone mentions it. We're just like "Huh." and move on to the things that actually affect us directly. It takes a pretty high-profile and involved community discourse to a) get enough attention drawn to the problem and b) work out as a community how we should respond to it.

    61. Re:Refreshment of memory by xappax · · Score: 1

      You describe an extremely antiseptic environment, where nobody ever talks about anything not directly related to the code, and they only talk about it in a bland tech-manual style. That's not reality.

      Reality is that people in the FOSS community enjoy FOSS, but they also enjoy community. Community often involves informal discussions, jokes, etc. and as you mention, interaction outside official channels. And that's all fantastic, and a big part of what keeps people engaged and excited about a project. Even something as simple as being informal and silly in the way you comment your code or explain your algorithm on the dev list can make the project more fun and satisfying, less like corporate work.

      The problem is that the very community so many men enjoy is currently alienating for the vast majority of women. Because currently, some of those jokes, discussions and silliness are misogynistic. So while women technically can participate in the coding, the "reward" of getting to be part of a fun community and getting respect from peers is worthless or undesirable to them.

    62. Re:Refreshment of memory by xappax · · Score: 1

      I see that you have produced 4 quotes, only 2 of which are actually relevant to the idea that women are better than men (a.k.a. sexism). Based purely on these quotes (though I'm meant to believe that "there's tons more") you claim to have accurately represented the entirety (or at least "the bulk") of feminism, and the many differing schools of thought and movements which make up "the feminist movement".

      Why make such generalizations? If those quotes piss you off, why not hate the people who said them, or the people who agree with them? Why instead put words into the mouths of a huge group of people who don't hate men, nor think women are any better? Why equate feminism with misandry? My guess - and that's all it can be - is that you hate feminism for other, unrelated reasons. That when women are assertive, uncompromising, and demand respect and recognition, it feels threatening. It feels as though they must hate you and all other men, because otherwise they wouldn't be so disruptive and annoying. So you make assumptions about their motivations. Because it's much easier to dismiss people who simply irrationally hate you than people with legitimate points to consider and discuss.

    63. Re:Refreshment of memory by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Q - How many feminists does it take to change a lightbulb?

      A: THAT'S NOT FUNNY YOU SEXIST PIG!

    64. Re:Refreshment of memory by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly believe that more than 50% of all germans felt it was right and proper to cart off a couple of million Jews to to concentration camps?

      Might I suggest that you learn a little bit of history. Start with "Ordinary Men" by Christopher R Browning and then maybe "The SS, Alibi of a nation 1922-1945". After that read up how Hitler managed to come to power and exactly what he told people before he did. Then, ignorant little fuck that you are, maybe you'll deserve the "darwin award" you asked for. As it you're lucky to escape with a proper Godwinning (note clause II.5) and a realisation that you're really lucky to escape with just unanswerable insults. You little toe cheese.

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    65. Re:Refreshment of memory by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      No, I don't think anyone said that. Though, you know, it would be nice if people realized that it is generally a bad thing for people to be able to make death threats against women without being called on it. Because these things escalate.

      As stated in this thread before, he has been called on it and banned from several mailing lists as a result. Not to mention several people must have called the cops on him by now.

      If you wanna comment about problems with sexism, try to focus on the actual sexism and not the antics of some verifiably crazy person trolling some mailing lists.

    66. Re:Refreshment of memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I don't think something like this should really exist in something like Debian. There shouldn't be a "Debian Women", "Debian LGBT", "Debian Minusvalids" or "Debian Furries" project not because it's somehow wrong for such people to participate (I belong to one of the listed categories), but because such things should be completely irrelevant and everybody should be only judged by the value of the code, art, etc they contribute.

      Hear hear.

  33. Missing reference by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Informative
    The summary should have included a link to Byfield's original post, which explains the basis for his claim of sexism in FOSS:

    In other words, women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

    Now, isn't that by itself enough to get you thinking?

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    1. Re:Missing reference by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Women are smarter than men and less of them didn't notice that FOSS is a stupid thing to participate in?

    2. Re:Missing reference by malkavian · · Score: 1

      Yes, it makes me think that women don't, by and large, go in for the hardcore coding section that makes up the broad majority of FOSS. Pay them money to do a job, and they'll happily join commercial software (where design is often as well resourced as the hard core dev work).
      They tend to prefer the arty side (UI design, user testing etc) that lends itself to the predominantly feminine preferences (females make better communicators, by and large).
      There are hardcore women coders out there, and they're as spectacular as the guys, where they feel that's what they want to do.. Just the majority of women don't want to be tied to a computer terminal.
      This whole article seems to be based on the words of a few people, and blown out of all proportion.
      Yes, there's sexism everywhere. On BOTH sides. That's life.
      I'm wondering why, when there's a feminist rant about men being evil, it's acceptable and everyone should rally round. When it's a guy saying exactly the same, but about women, it's evil (though MikeeUSA is WAY over the top)..

    3. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm thinking "Women like money".

    4. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the only reason why self-organizing, self-selected groups of volunteers tackling specific high-skilled problems might result in this way is because they hate women.

      If you're not interested in X, the people who are are under no obligation to do stuff to balm your ego. Equality of opportunity does not translate into equality of outcome. Look at footraces.

    5. Re:Missing reference by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "Now, isn't that by itself enough to get you thinking?"

      Yeah, it makes me think that women understand better than to waste their development skills NOT GETTING PAID, and that hobby-time outside of work, they probably have better things to do than code.

      Or did you mean to insinuate something else?

      --
      -Styopa
    6. Re:Missing reference by R2.0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah - it makes me think like there might be something different obout corporate employment and volunteerism.

      Perhaps some kind of laws that requires the former to hire a certain indeterminate number of women or be sued.

      And perhaps run by some government entity. A commission, perhaps. And it could be called "Equal Employment" or some-such.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    7. Re:Missing reference by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Pretty much. I'd put it as "women have lives". Men are much more likely than women to heavily focus on narrow fields of interest, which mostly a requirement for FOSS.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    8. Re:Missing reference by Krahar · · Score: 1

      The summary should have included a link to Byfield's original post, which explains the basis for his claim of sexism in FOSS:

      In other words, women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

      Now, isn't that by itself enough to get you thinking?

      It gets me thinking that you just like all the rest of us don't know how to properly interpret that number. If you want me to take that number seriously as an indicator of sexism, you better have some research to pin down such a slippery claim.

    9. Re:Missing reference by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Get me thinking what? That maybe guys pursue technical things as a hobby more than women? My wife is a very smart, technically proficient woman. She still leaves all the home electronics and such to me. It's just not something she finds fun. It's just an anecdote, but I doubt it's an uncommon state of affairs. FOSS is staffed mostly by people who do it for fun.

      Why don't we get on about the sexism in aftermarket car modding? Most of the gearheads are men... that's obviously sexist! Really... why do people keep confusing coincidence with cause?

    10. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and no. Some things to consider:

      1) I'm under the impression that there are a lot more male coders out there than there are female coders.

      2) I'm absolutely certain that not all coders contribute to open source.

      This makes the cross section of coders who are female AND contribute to open source likely to be pretty damn small, right? I mean, why point the finger at FOSS, when the entire industry is skewed?

    11. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No money, no girls? ;-p

    12. Re:Missing reference by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      It makes me think that FOSS doesn't pay as well as proprietary development and so attracts a larger "hobbyist" crowd that women are not as often hobbyist programmers as men. Quite likely due to the whole introverted programmer nerd paradigm being so firmly entrenched in the masculine gender.
      You will rarely find women who were totally unable to form solid social bonds with their peers in their teenage yeers.

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    13. Re:Missing reference by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Men and women want different things. Men and women value different things, short term, medium term, and long term.

      Hence they enter different careers, they have different hobbies, they arrange their social life different, they enjoy different types of video games, etc.

      For some reason all the debate is about what men and women can do, instead of what they want.

      The inability to grasp this has resulted in such absurd levels of 'crying wolf' about sexist that actual sexist incidences get ignored.

      The reason women don't do FOSS is not that they're unable to do. The reason women don't do FOSS is not that they're discouraged from programming careers. The reason women don't do FOSS is not that they're forced out by sexism.

      None of those are true. The second was true once, but none of them are true now. The reason women don't do FOSS is that they don't like to fucking program web servers in their spare time. Why, I don't know, but a better question might be why the hell some men do.

      But that's not an important argument to make. It matters not one bit if any person likes to do that or not. If they like it, they should be free to do it in the same meritocracy as everyone else...and they are. They just don't want to be in the meritocracy.

      But we have moronic 'feminists' looking for things to complain about who notice a gender imbalance, and the idea that men might like to do something in different proportion than women never enters their heads. But a large number of programmers now are female, so clearly the FOSS community must, somehow, be either deliberately rejecting said women, or just have a horrible working environment.

      Luckily for that thesis, a lot of FOSS people are rather unskilled socially and thus one or two examples can be found, and, tada, another thesis proved, it's time for Superfeminist to fly away to save some more imaginary women and generate more ill will for 'feminists'.

      Meanwhile, right now, nurses are still seriously underworked and overpaid, and it might be a useful thing to get traditionally female professions to actual pay equaliy with male professions. But Superfeminist don't like to pay any attention to mostly-female professions because, according to her logic, such a profession must be actively discriminating against men. (As opposed to men simply not liking nursing.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    14. Re:Missing reference by ghostdoc · · Score: 1

      yep, it gets me thinking that women like to be paid to code

      --
      Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
    15. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

      So most women are only in software development for the money?

    16. Re:Missing reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. It makes me think that female programmers are largely in it for the money.

  34. It is possible. by khasim · · Score: 1

    You're talking about sexism targeted at a specific individual ("your code sucks because you're a girl").

    There can also be generalized sexism. That would be comments about women not directed at any specific individual. Such as telling sexist jokes.

    The question is, where is that behaviour demonstrated in FOSS development? So far there have been very few examples of such.

    1. Re:It is possible. by GryMor · · Score: 1

      The behavior demonstrated in FOSS development is code, anything else is a waste of bandwidth, and should be condemned for it. If that anything else is also sexist, it should be condemned for both.

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    2. Re:It is possible. by jimbolauski · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Kind of like this.
      Girls suck at math

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    3. Re:It is possible. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      And the comment thread that ensued was one of the biggest "xkcd makes insightful social commentary, the basement boys fail to get the point, hilarity ensues" bit of the xkcd forum in a long while.

  35. Emotionally charged sexism term by Peteskiplayer · · Score: 1

    "For instance, I am currently part of an email conversation with a prominent FOSS community member who has been pilloried who is hurt and baffled that I (or anyone else) could apply the word "sexism" to them. Their reasoning? They did not intend to be sexist, so therefore they can't possibly be. Therefore, labelling their behavior as unacceptable is unfair, they argue. The fact that, in context, their actions and remarks could not possibly be described in any other way honestly does not seem to have occurred to them. No matter what I say, they remain hurt and baffled -- and, like so many, deeply in denial."

    The version of sexism as I see it(and I'm guessing most people in the UK/western world) is sexism *is* an intentional chauvinistic attitude, http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=sexism and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexism are the main things I am looking at right now. I can see that sexism may technically mean "the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to, less competent, or less valuable than the other", but this would mean that their intentions would be very important into determining what is meant. Using an emotionally charged word like that to describe someone without defining it would hurt most people, there is no reason to be surprised here.

    I believe there might well be some bias in the FOSS world against women (although I've never encountered it due to working on fair few projects) and this should be rallied against (it's just foolish to be biased and helps noone, the project would suffer from fewer contributors), but labelling it sexism places it close to "women should be in the kitchen" thinking in my mind and is unproductive and will lead to defensiveness and even resentment from the male community for being labelled as such. It seems as if the author can't understand why someone might be hurt by being labelled a sexist.

    In all, this doesn't seem to be very objective or useful reporting and is purely to get clicks and links onto his site and stir up some debate. In my opinion. :D

  36. "sendthemtothekitchen" by oldhack · · Score: 1

    The subject is one of tags for the story at the moment. ;-)

    Anyway, FOSS realm seem to require extra heavy-duty flame-proof skin, and anyone that stands out, even just by being a female, will attract the flame. OD level testosterone means extra allergic reaction to social issues like sexism.

    Apply another layer of makeup and keep plugging on, GRRRRL HAXORS! (That's how they spell these days, right?)

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
  37. i hope im not the only one that sees the irony by DeadRat4life · · Score: 1

    Just about every post above me is displaying denial abuse and ignorance, exactly as described in the article. if you people really dont see any sexism here, you are blind.

    1. Re:i hope im not the only one that sees the irony by joss · · Score: 1

      Hey, the author is a guy, so being abusive to him isn't sexist, and in this case I think its justified, after all he is being abusive too, he's just being subtle about it. He's heavy on hyperbole and light [or positively weightless] on examples. Just like you come to think of it.. what is this ignorance , what higher knowledge are we not privy to ? Please enlighten us with something vaguely concrete. Lastly, just because one denies something doesn't mean one is guilty.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    2. Re:i hope im not the only one that sees the irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When did you stop beating your wife?"

  38. Standard FOSS: Don't blame, Debug! by jd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As much as the F/L/OSS community likes to pretend that it is distinct from the "real world" communities, it isn't. But whereas the "real world" is mostly comprised of idiots who lack the mental capacity to understand anything new, let alone seek it, F/L/OSS developers often represent some of the most curious, information-seeking individuals and some of the highest-calibre intellects out there.

    So if we have trouble excusing such behaviour for the "normals", we must be far, far harder on ourselves for those same flaws.

    There is a flip-side, though, that the original poster may have neglected to consider. F/L/OSS developers ARE amongst the brightest and the best, but they also have extraordinarily high levels of autistic behaviours, anti-social disorders, emotional instability and alienation.

    (The first two are collectively known as "Geek Syndrome". The latter two are the inevitable consequence of Geek Syndrome in a society that tolerates no differences, no matter what it says.)

    It is not just likely, but a near-certainty that people with that kind of internal and external pressure WILL fragment into groups that conceal differences by being essentially uniform.

    I'm not sure if it can be called sexism when such behaviour is, at least in part, a mask to conceal what's going on. The mask can be sexist without the person underneath being.

    However, true misogyny does exist, independent of the mask. THAT particular aspect of sexism should be rooted out and burned, as it is warped, buggy thinking. Bugs SHOULD be erased, and a buggy brain SHOULD be patched.

    The problem is how to tell the mask from the person underneath. These are distinct issues. The mask doesn't need fixing, rather the person needs an extended API to handle errors, and the Real World needs replacing with Real World 2.0 to debug the flawed mental processes that produce the garbage in the first place.

    Once either the person has better exception-handling or error trapping, and/or there's less noise generating errors, the mask can be erased. It's a filter that exists to hide bad wet-coding and so the sooner we get rid of the bad code, the sooner we can get rid of the filter.

    My guess would be that if the mask died, a good 75% of the perceived sexism in F/L/OSS would die with it, without a single F/L/OSS coder needing to change their view of gender.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Standard FOSS: Don't blame, Debug! by maroberts · · Score: 1

      I agree with the parent poster - some of the arguments in the FLOSS community are no holds barred, regardless of sexism, by people with minimal social skills. I suppose some of Linus' comments, if he'd thrown them at a woman instead of (pick hapless developer here) would be regarded as abusive. FLOSS collaborative development lacks some of the social niceties required of us by working in a corporate environment, where insults could cost your job.

      --

      Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
      Karma: Chameleon

    2. Re:Standard FOSS: Don't blame, Debug! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      without a single F/L/OSS coder needing to change their gender.

    3. Re:Standard FOSS: Don't blame, Debug! by Tranzistors · · Score: 1
    4. Re:Standard FOSS: Don't blame, Debug! by jd · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. The study on Malaysia interested me, as it's been a well-known paradox in the West that up to the age of 12, girls are vastly superior in maths and science to boys. People have looked at all kinds of explanations, but if there are countries where they're expected to do better throughout their lives and actually do, then the social expectation is clearly a sizable factor.

      I'm glad they mentioned Aspergers in the article. Now that the US has finally admitted that it gets the same incidence rate as every other western nation, it might be possible to identify how this affects communities and hobbies.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  39. I'll see your sexism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and raise you an ire and denial.

    What? You call??

    FUCK, full house queens over sevens? All I've got is a king and a jack. :-(

  40. Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by khasim · · Score: 4, Informative

    You've linked (1) to a link (2) referencing a presentation (3) by ONE GUY at a rather small meeting (200 people).

    So that ONE instance is repeated over and over (and linked to) as "evidence" of "sexism" instead of being seen as what it really is:
    ONE instance out of thousands of non-sexist presentations.

    Again, if 1.5% of FOSS developers are women, but only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

    1. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, no boobies for code monkeys.

      Next case.

    2. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Nothing wrong with a healthy dose of skepticism to keep the hyperbole in check.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    3. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by LitelySalted · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's exactly the dismissive attitude that allows the problem to continue. Ire and denial.

      Or perhaps it's your attitude that perpetuates the problem.

      Making a mountain out of a molehill does nothing useful. There are plenty of people out there who support women, but don't like the attitude of the women who have zero tolerance. Instead, they cast a negative light on what should be a positive and progressive movement.

      If you really want to help women out, focus on encouraging them to like science and engineering rather than crying foul every time some moron on the internet says something stupid (hopefully that comment is not quoted for irony).

    4. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by nametaken · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Careful, this conversation is a TRAAAAP.

      Apparently you either agree that there's rampant sexism in the FOSS community or you're "displaying similar levels of denial, abuse, and ignorance".

    5. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Again, if 1.5% of FOSS developers are women, but only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

      You've provided a nice illustration of the problem. If it turns out that, say, 10% of FOSS developers are black, do you think that would make nigger references OK as long as we kept them under 1%? If 5% of FOSS developers are gay, do you think that allows up to 0.5% faggot references?

      Anyone have some stats on the percentage of FOSS developers that are Jewish, Arab, or Mexican so I can figure out what percentage of my comments are allowed to mention kikes, camel fucking, and wetbacks without it being a problem?

    6. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by blueZ3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And this is exactly why I can't take any of this seriously.

      Someone claims there's an issue. Anyone who says otherwise (or points out that it's all anecdotes and no statistics) must either be 1) in denial or 2) a sexist pig

      Offhand, I can think of at least four or five other possibilities.

      --
      Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    7. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Eudial · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the dismissive attitude that allows the problem to continue. Ire and denial.

      As a member of the secret worldwide conspiracy of "Men", I assure you that we have never discussed FOSS in any of our secret meetings. We mostly sit around in top hats and monocles in front of fireplaces, drinking cognac and mocking the plights of women.

      --
      GAAH! MY PRINTER IS ON FIRE!!! PUT IT OUT! PUT IT OUT!
    8. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      This wouldn't be a problem if women stayed in the kitchen like they are supposed too.

      Yes I am trolling and now the comments are tainted by my sexist claims please feed me!

      I would bet the 90% of the sexist comments were made by trolls and the other 10% by guys who spent a lot of time fixing an error made by a woman so instead of calling that woman, a no talent ass clown, a pillow biting homo, or a inbred moron, as they would a man, they say women can't code which usually pisses off the woman so it hit it's mark.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    9. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by lukas84 · · Score: 1

      People should always be able to take a joke. That includes everyone women, men, jews, arabas, mexican, blacks, fat people etc.

      I still don't get the permanent bitching about being politically correct with everything. There are formal and informal places - and most FOSS mailing lists are one of the latter.

      And this informality is one of the reasons why doing this is attractive - because you can go out and state your opinion. I wouldn't tell a coworker "your idea sucks and you should shut the fuck up", because it would be bad for the workplace. In a more informal setting, you can do that.

      Being 100% nice and 100% honest isn't possible.

    10. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm dismissive because nobody has the right to not have their feelings hurt. There's no reason to go out of your way to be a jackass, but taking offense to every little thing means that we only get the lowest common denominator of crap that everyone can accept as "politically correct."

      The entire world hates white men. They get no extra scholarships, no special consideration, actively chosen against when hiring because of quotas... why doesn't anyone care about that? Oh, wait... it's because white men by and large see problems and just solve them, instead of bitching about the world being "unfair".

    11. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by jdgeorge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Careful, this conversation is a TRAAAAP.

      Apparently you either agree that there's rampant sexism in the FOSS community or you're "displaying similar levels of denial, abuse, and ignorance".

      I don't think so. But I would agree that many comments here on Slashdot do have the feel of having either taken bait of trolls or of being genuinely intolerant issues women may face in FOSS.

      This discussion reminds me of Slashdot debates about the value of Web accessibility. Many developers expressed the view that the disabled population was so small that they didn't matter. Others railed in frustration against the injustice of having significant information facilities unavailable to people born blind or otherwise disabled or to those who became disabled through war or disease.

      There are people who post well thought out, informed comments on Slashdot, but those are not generally the most exciting comments, and they are not the only ones to get modded +5 Insightful.

    12. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So if only 1.5% of developers are women ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

      I'm not going to argue with the idea that only 0.1% of comments in the FOSS movement are sexist, because you're probably right: the vast majority of interaction and discussion in the FOSS is not sexist. What I think you're overlooking, however, is that there isn't a threshold for sexism. Sexism is an issue of perception, not of percentages. For example, simply because we have female politicians doesn't mean that politics isn't also a sexist field.

      The problem trying to be solved is the feeling of exclusion by some women from the FOSS movement. For example, I'm having difficulty finding apologies for the examples of sexism people are linking to. That's not an issue of numbers, but an issue of perception. It tells me, a woman, that people in the FOSS will make mistakes. But everyone makes mistakes - that's not a deal-breaker. But it also tells me that members of the FOSS movement will be reluctant to apologize for their mistakes, and that can become a deal-breaker.

      And, for what it's worth, I don't think those standards are unreasonable. I don't shun or reject friends, family, coworkers, whomever, simply because they carelessly said something hurtful or offensive. But if they A) don't acknowledge what they said is problematic and B) refuse to apologize, I eventually will decide to remove myself from situations where I have to interact with them. That's what the issue seems to be here. Not merely that FOSS has issues with sexist jokes - western culture has an issue with sexist jokes - but that a movement which, to me, has connected itself with ideals of rights and equality isn't able or willing to apologize about them.

      -Trillian

    13. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Krahar · · Score: 1

      Clever. You didn't answer his question, instead you made the argument that people dismissing the problem is a proof of the problem. That's not true.

    14. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by stdarg · · Score: 1

      comments are allowed to mention kikes, camel fucking, and wetbacks without it being a problem

      You don't understand the difference between an individual being sexist and a group being largely sexist?

      You can personally make those comments all you want, even 100%, and it's not going to make a difference to the perception of slashdot as a whole. Get it?

    15. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      I, for one, think you've met your quota for about a decade. ( ?< )

      I think the point being made is that GP is asking for examples which are not already one-offs shunned by the community.

      This is open source, after all. Most of our communications, be it mailing list or irc, are publicly archived.

      Hell, even rough communal approval of comments is public knowledge. Take Slashdot's mod system for example. You get thousands of sexist and racist comments here, even more than 0.1%.. however they get modded into the trash can. Call me politically incorrect, but I think that is a fair way for a forum to proceed. We are not suggesting that a 0.1% failure rate must be tolerated simply because we want to lean upon that personally, but because there will always be trolls and morons. No amount of penitence from the innocent will shut up the lunatic fringe.

      FOSS does not live by the same rules as the professional world, either. Sexism (ideally) gets you fired in big business. What can be done about trolls here, ban them from the internet? (gawd, I know the link that will bring up..) I really think more people need to be in harmony with the forest and tune out the obnoxious trees on this one.

      So please do not confuse "I want some examples, btw one-offs do not count" with the No Real Scotsman fallacy. We all know the alleged problem is systemic, so we want systemic examples that have shown some amount of looking-the-other-way from the community. Slashdot comments modded up, conferences with sexist slides where the presenter's reputation didn't get trashed, you know. That sort of thing. Lestwise, how can communal attitudes be faulted?

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    16. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not his point, and you know it. He's trying to point out that there are _more important things_ than something that occurs very rarely, hence his use of magic percentages.

    17. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by brkello · · Score: 1

      Sometimes when you deny something doesn't exist, it actually doesn't exist (or at least in any significant way). Also, sometimes anger is justified. I don't really care what you want to label it. I want to know the facts of the situation. You seem to be too emotionally involved to be speaking from a rational standpoint. So far I haven't seen anything surprising. If I were to post something with my liberal point of view I would receive just as bad. It's the Internet.

      --
      Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    18. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

      I've had people -- family members, whom I love -- say and do things to me that I think were manifestly unfair, hurtful, wrong; whatever, you name it. I've talked to them about and they disagree, so they won't apologize for it. And yeah, it really, really pisses me off, and the resulting resentment is damaging to our relationship.

      But you know what? THAT HAPPENS TO EVERYONE. I'm male, and I know exactly what you mean, because it has nothing to do with "sexism". Having people offend you and then refuse to apologize or even accept they did anything wrong is maddeningly frustrating. It's frustrating for men, women, whites, Hispanics, blacks; everyone. People sometimes disagree that they wronged you, and they won't apologize if they do. This is part of the human condition.

      So, I'm going to have to say that the world is not going to change here and that you just need to accept this fact of life. It's not sexism, just a symptom of the fact that people suck.

      --
      vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
    19. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Apparently you either agree that there's rampant sexism in the FOSS community or you're "displaying similar levels of denial, abuse, and ignorance".

      Yes, it's a trap. "My claims are true, as proven by acceptance OR denial on your part" is a fundamentally flawed argument, one that skips over the actual question of whether the claim is true or not. Sadly, the people that believe that will read through hundreds of posts pointing that out, and consider themselves vindicated: "See! They are so sexist that they're denying there's a problem!"

      The only proper response is to reject the entire flawed accusation at its core, rephrasing it in more sensible terms. Is there sexism? Is it getting better or worse? Is it widespread or isolated? More or less than the culture as a whole? There may be sexism in FOSS... but stating (as the author does) "...anti feminists and average men who would like to deny the importance of feminist issues in FOSS" indicates the author has a massive amount of pre-existing bias. That won't help reduce the amount of sexism; that sort of ridiculous hyperbole inflames it.

    20. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly the dismissive attitude that allows the problem to continue. Ire and denial.

      Then you need to stop dismissing the problem and answer the question.

      The parent question is simple. "what is the REAL problem that you're trying to 'solve'?"

      Just be blunt. Us not seeing that there is a problem because exactly all of zero people show or describe any problems, is not denial.

    21. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by nschubach · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure his point is that 0.1% is far far less than may be occurring outside of FOSS but nobody is looking for that figure. They are fixating on this issue which for all intents could be so minor that it's not worth the time arguing. (ie: There are bigger issues behind this and attacking the flees to get rid of the dog infestation is probably the wrong way about it.)

      Why are you not arguing about sexist toys at the store? I mean, why are Barbie Dolls marketed only to young girls? I'd imagine there's a bit more sexism involved in every day television than there is going on in FOSS development.

      Personally, this sounds to me like a fabricated argument. It feels to me as though someone seemed extra vigilant to point it out as a FOSS exclusive flaw. (but according to the story, that makes me a naysayer... so I can't win, eh?)

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    22. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reply. I agree with some of what you're saying, but I think we take different conclusions from the same situation.

      Having people offend you and then refuse to apologize or even accept they did anything wrong is maddeningly frustrating. It's frustrating for men, women, whites, Hispanics, blacks; everyone. People sometimes disagree that they wronged you, and they won't apologize if they do. This is part of the human condition.

      What you're saying is manifestly true, and I completely agree: Everyone has experience with people being mean, rude, offensive, and generally jerks. And being offended is not a "minority" issue, limited to women/blacks/gays/whomever; someone being mean or offensive doesn't automatically make the issue race/sex/religion/etc-ism. It's possible to be mean or rude to a woman without being sexist - that person could just be an asshole.

      So, I'm going to have to say that the world is not going to change here and that you just need to accept this fact of life. It's not sexism, just a symptom of the fact that people suck.

      That's where I disagree.

      First, I disagree that the world isn't going to change. Maybe I'm a naive optimist, but when I see a country having gone from slavery and women being unable to vote to having a woman and a black man as serious contenders for the presidency, I do think that indicates some change is possible. (And I'm not trying to debate whether those politicians were/are good or bad at their jobs, or have good/bad policies, or whether we've "solved" racism or sexism. I'm just noting that - once upon a time - one of them wouldn't have been able to vote, while the other could have actually been enslaved, and neither of those things are true anymore.) Likewise, when we've gone from having homosexuality being outlawed to having gay marriage as a national topic of conversation, I call that change.

      But those are all big, national changes. They aren't necessarily changes reflected in individual interaction. So, moving back to the much smaller scale that this conversation has been about, I think it's possible and desirable to encourage people not to be jerks quite so much. You're right, this isn't an issue limited to a single race, gender, ethnicity, sexuality, whatever. But I don't understand why, if a certain type of comment or interaction hurts me, the response to my pain should be, "You just need to accept this fact of life."

      Yes, it's important to pick your battles. Yes, it's important to keep perspective. If I took every little negative interaction as The Most Important Thing Ever, I'd go crazy, I'd never leave my apartment. But I absolutely and categorically disagree that, simply because people are often mean to each other, it's acceptable to stay quiet in the face of meanness. That it's not worth encouraging people to be nicer to each other, just for the sake of being nicer.

      As for your last sentence, "It's not sexism, just a symptom of the fact that people suck," I disagree here as well.

      I don't think sexism and sucking are mutually exclusive: It's both sexism and a symptom of the fact that people suck.

      Again, I agree that not every negative interaction with a minority or oppressed group automatically means ______ism toward that group. But that also doesn't mean that none of the interactions are _______ist.

      -Trillian

      PS - For clarification, and to correct something from my above post, I don't know enough about the FOSS movement to say, "It's sexist." I shouldn't have uniformly referred to "the FOSS movement," because I'm painting with a broader brush than I really have knowledge to do fairly. But I do think the comments and examples linked to throughout this discussion, and the original articles, indicate that some people within the FOSS display sexist behavior, and the movement as a whole doesn't seem to be - as far as I can see - willing to acknowledge that.

    23. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You've provided a nice illustration of the problem. If it turns out that, say, 10% of FOSS developers are black, do you think that would make nigger references OK as long as we kept them under 1%? If 5% of FOSS developers are gay, do you think that allows up to 0.5% faggot references?

      For years one of the first few posts on every Slashdot story was a GNAA (Gay Nigger Aliiance of America) troll. They were constant. Do you think Slashdot is racist and anti-gay? Do you think those posts were representative of the Slashdot community?

      People on the internet will say thing you find offensive. Trolls will say things because you find them offensive. All online communities have trolls, as well as people who don't understand their comments may offend, and people who know but don't care. The answer? Get over yourself. If you only want to participate in communities where everyone is nice to you, the internet is not for you.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    24. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by lgw · · Score: 1

      That's what the issue seems to be here. Not merely that FOSS has issues with sexist jokes - western culture has an issue with sexist jokes - but that a movement which, to me, has connected itself with ideals of rights and equality isn't able or willing to apologize about them.

      Wait, so you find all of western culture too insensitive for you to interact with comfortably? And you don't see this as evidence that you need to grow a thicker skin? I don't know you, and maybe I'm misreading you, but there's truth to the saying "if everyone you see is an asshole, look in the mirror".

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

      Well, if you're going to convince people to apologize for their "sexist" behavior, you will first have to convince them that it is in fact sexist. I, for one, am not convinced, am mentally cheerleading Mark Shuttleworth for not apologizing, and hope he doesn't cave. It's just as possible for the party refusing to apologize to be right as it is for the party demanding the apology, and FOSS feminists seem to get offended far too easily.

      I'm not saying there aren't individuals in the community who aren't sexist -- I'm sure at least a few probably are -- but it's certainly not institutionalized. Women are allowed to code, and no one is stopping them from contributing code to projects. Some do regularly contribute code. The sexists, however many exist, have lost.

      What the groups like Debian Women seem to be about is chainging the community structure so that no one is /allowed/ to say things they deem "sexist" on mailing lists and whatnot. This is just censorship: I probably don't agree with their definition of sexism, and sexist trolls aren't different from any other trolls and don't need to be handled specially. Their reactions to legitimate software packages like hot-babe solidified my view that Debian Women and groups like it are a destructive force in the FOSS community, albeit a relatively minor and impotent one.

      I am firmly of the belief that people do not have the right not to be offended. Moreover, I think that being offended by random strangers on the Internet -- in a FOSS community or any other one -- is basically par for the course when you choose to go on the Internet and that that is not going to change any time soon. It's debatable whether it should -- reading trolls can be fun. I'm upset if someone I care about offends me, but it's common to never even have met collaborators you work with on OSS projects, so I don't see any reason why people can't just ignore it and move on if they're offended by someone's tone on a mailing list -- be it because they think the person is sexist or for any other reason. In short, Internet communities have always been offensive, but it's only words and most people can ignore them. It's only some subset of the geek feminist crowd that apparently has a problem with this.

      --
      vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
    26. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      For example, I'm having difficulty finding apologies for the examples of sexism people are linking to.

      You're not likely to, for the reason that the people likely to appear in your examples are the ones likely to make lame-ass apologies like "I'm sorry you took that wrong". Do you want something from the rest of us? OK, then:

      I'm sorry those guys acted like asses. They only speak for themselves, though. My mom is one of the smartest people I've ever known. My wife's a surgeon. My daughters are teaching themselves to program (without me even bringing it up). I have the same expectations for my girls as for my boys, and won't put up with less "because they're girls" (or vice versa for that matter). Furthermore, I think people like me outnumber the jerks who think it's funny to put hard-core porn in presentations.

      So what do you want from me, personally? I tried the women around me as equals, because they are. I'm raising smart and confident kids. I don't tolerate sexism around me (even if I laugh at the occasional "dumb woman" or "dumb man" jokes (and if you don't believe the latter exist, hang out in a mostly-woman break room some time)). Short of apologizing for something I haven't done, which isn't going to happen, there's not a lot more I think I can do about it.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    27. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      Why would I apologize for something that someone else has done? It wasn't my idea, I didn't encourage them to do it, nor was I aware of their intentions beforehand. So what do I have to apologize for? I had nothing to do with the situation.
      Should I also be roaming the streets apologizing randomly to people for things which may have been done to them by other people with whom I am not associated?

      Now, to get to the real point of this response: Life is -ist. It's Racist, it's Sexist, it's Ageist. Wherever there is a group of people with similar traits they will make jokes about groups that don't share those traits. As one of the technology elites have you never made a joke about someones lack of technical competence? Equality includes the right to be ridiculed equally. Amongst my rather diverse circle of friends which includes folk of both genders, various ethnicity's and assorted sexual preferences jokes regarding sexuality, ethnicity, gender, genealogy, personal grooming habits, etc... etc... are standard fare. When a new person is introduced to the group that person doesn't get special treatment. They receive their fair measure of harassment. It's part of our cohesion as a group.

      So far no one has been able to show that any kind of sexist behavior is systemic within the community, so what we really have are a select few incidents which are being latched onto as representative of the community when they manifestly are not.

      As for western culture and sexist jokes, all cultures have gender derogatory jokes regarding both sexes. Western culture is no exception. There are entire libraries of jokes about how incompetent men are as well as women. There are legions of jokes about sex which show both men and women in the role of the buffoon.

      There are indeed real issues of sexism alive in the world, this is not one of them.

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    28. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      But it also tells me that members of the FOSS movement will be reluctant to apologize for their mistakes, and that can become a deal-breaker.

      It seems that there's a bit of that going on both sides - try posting on a feminist blog and disagreeing with the author as a man. Even money you get deleted.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    29. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      People should always be able to take a joke. That includes everyone women, men, jews, arabas, mexican, blacks, fat people etc.

      Sure, fsck 'em if they can't take a joke.

      But also, fsck 'em if they try to hide their ignorance, fear, and bigotry as jokes.

      "Gee, lukas84, when I said that by rights you and all members of your (ethnic group/church/LUG/whatever) should be ritually disemboweled while forced to watch their whole families being raped, I was just joking. Lighten up!"

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    30. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      PS - For clarification, and to correct something from my above post, I don't know enough about the FOSS movement to say, "It's sexist." I shouldn't have uniformly referred to "the FOSS movement," because I'm painting with a broader brush than I really have knowledge to do fairly.

      That's good...otherwise you'd be being FOSSist. blaming all FOSS community members for the actions of a few.

      But I do think the comments and examples linked to throughout this discussion, and the original articles, indicate that some people within the FOSS display sexist behavior, and the movement as a whole doesn't seem to be - as far as I can see - willing to acknowledge that.

      in my experience (primarily within the debian developer community) instances of overt sexism are extremely rare and the occasional misogynist nutter that comes along is very quickly stomped on and told to shut up and fuck off.

      And that's the point - debian as a whole is welcoming of women and even has a debian-women team to help and support female involvement in debian and FOSS in general, but there will always be individual prejudiced nutcases and trolls who represent an insignificantly tiny minority but who generate a huge amount of heat and noise while they're active. They're noticeable partly because of the flamewars their misogynist comments create and partly because of their rarity. they stand out *because* they're rare and unusual in the community and because the majority vehemently disagree with them.

      on a more general note - my partner is a programmer (and a damn good one - better than me, anyway). she's never had any difficulties in either work or geek circles due to her gender, certainly far less than in "real life" (i.e. outside of programming/tech). her recurring complaint is not that women are excluded from tech fields but that so few women *want* to participate, or even think in the right kind of ways to be any good at it. if there is sexism problem, it's not within FOSS itself, it's within the general society where women are generally discouraged from a very young age to avoid scary science and technology.

    31. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beyond just sexism, but in general, the F/OSS community could be a lot better about issueing apologies.

    32. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by IorDMUX · · Score: 1

      Wait, so you find all of western culture too insensitive for you to interact with comfortably?

      The GP quite clearly stated that said jokes embraced by both FOSS and western culture in general were not the issue, but rather that leaders in the FOSS movement advocate rights, free-as-in-anything, and equality who have offended people do not seem to be willing to apologize when they do so.

      --
      >> Standing on head makes smile of frown, but rest of face also upside down.
    33. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by ZekoMal · · Score: 1

      Careful, this conversation is a TRAAAAP..

      Hey, I only trust Admiral Ackbar for traps!

      That being said, I always find that there's three sides to the 'ism fight. You have the 'ist people, who do hate someone based on some sort of genetic difference. You have the people who have this particular genetic difference that have this irrational hate and fear of the 'ist people (compare this to the people who cough loudly and exaggerate whenever they see someone smoking to try and get them to fight).

      Then you have the third side. That's the majority of people, the people who don't care and just want to have fun. I'm a girl, I don't see rampant and out of control sexism. I see a few men parroting the same tired statements, but it's no more sexism than it is stupidism. So, it's best to just ignore the loud cries of the uber-offended, and to ignore the loud cries of the uber-offenders. These are societal extremes that will never be happy.

    34. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Rick17JJ · · Score: 1

      Back in the late 1980s, I was in a stupid 1 credit "connections" class, which every student at a particular Junior College in Arizona, had to take. I remember one incident, with a female student, in the "connections" class. On that assignment, we had to pair off and answer a question which the other person would grade. We were not supposed to grade them based on whether we agreed with them or not. I was paired up with a student who was a mother in her mid-40s.

      The question for me, was something about how likely I would be to hire a woman for a computer programming job. Below is roughly what I said:

      I said that, I would seriously consider the woman as a good candidate and examine at her qualifications. I mentioned that I had taken several computer classes, but was disappointed at how few women there were in the classes. Of those few women in those classes, none seemed to be passionate about expanding their abilities, beyond what was required in the class. I also mentioned, that I had browsed thorough computer magazines in book stores, hundreds of times over the years without ever once seeing a women look at a computer magazine or ham radio magazine or anything like that. I also mentioned, that no women ever came to the local computer club or ham radio club meetings on their own. I say that with disappointment, because I would like to see more women involved in those activities.

      I then went on to say, that despite the seeming lack of serious passionate interest in computers, from the few women I had met so far, I was not ready to assume that all women were like that. I was quite willing to give a female job applicant serious consideration and give her the benefit of the doubt, and consider the possibility that she might really have a serious interest in computers.

      The female student who was grading my reply was absolutely furious and gave me a "F," despite the fact that we were not supposed to be grading each other on whether we agree with the answer or not. She never did say exactly what was wrong with what I had said. The incident made somewhat of an impression on me, and left me wondering what was wrong with my answer. I had already given her a good grade for the question, which she had to answer ahead of that.

      In that hypothetical situation, I had said I would seriously consider the female person as a serious candidate. What more could anyone ask? If anything, I was making an extra effort to give female candidates a fair opportunity, despite my lack of exposure to women who were seriously interested in computers. What was she upset about? Did she just simply misunderstand what I had just said? What I learned from that exercise, in the "connections" class, was that even if I try extra hard to treat women fairly, they can be quite angry with me anyway.

      By the way, over the next couple of decades, after that, I was pleased to have encountered several women who were quite interested in computers and who were quite capable. One such women, was a regular at the local LUG meetings. I do not work with computers at work, so I do not have any personal experience with writing software for the FOSS community. For me, computers are just a hobby.

    35. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by coopersnick · · Score: 1

      So, you (1) ask for an example, and are (2) then given one - and then (3) immediately refuse to even consider it? I would suggest your percentage argument is valid, but you continue hammering the original statement. The kind of thing shown in that example is the problem here, that 0.1% of comments are clearly not levelled at you - so you're not affected by them. 0.1% is too much.

    36. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why would I apologize for something that someone else has done? It wasn't my idea, I didn't encourage them to do it, nor was I aware of their intentions beforehand. So what do I have to apologize for? I had nothing to do with the situation.

      Let's leave the word "apologize" out of this for a bit. In fact, let's leave the whole "blame" thing out of it for a bit. It simply is, as a general rule, good for you to understand why other people were offended by somebody's action, and to demonstrate that you understand. (And I mean genuinely demonstrate that you genuinely do understand; a lot of this shit, in practice, is not genuine in sympathy or genuine in understanding.)

      A lot of third-party "apologies" come down to this. They're really a recognition, by A's part, that A understands that B offended C, and why C considers the act as an offense. They're not necessarily an admission of responsibility; they're just recognition of somebody's perspective on an incident. Demonstrating that you understand why somebody took offense to something is a pretty good way of deescalating a situation when somebody genuinely takes offense, and if you have some authority over the situation (like, being a conference organizer or mailing list admin), it helps people keep faith on your authority (though you may need to do more than just that in many situations).

      Should I also be roaming the streets apologizing randomly to people for things which may have been done to them by other people with whom I am not associated?

      No, nobody expects that. But oftentimes, somebody who your are associated with does something to offend somebody else that you are also associated with, and in many of those situations, it is appropriate and good to demonstrate that you understand the nature of the offense. There is no clear line that separates the cases where you really must do so and the cases that you absolutely don't have to, but showing yourself as being too concerned over that tends to mark you as a selfish asshole who's more interested in assigning blame than in getting along with people.

    37. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well Slashdot has enough "Freedom fries" and "Indian call center"/Apu jokes. That does not stop French and Indians from visiting the site.

    38. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      difference between being polite and being run over by the other persons beliefs.
      Me i pretty much define WASP (primarily Irish Non Southern Baptist) but
      1 Im all for any kind of irish jokes (the best irish joke i know is my Father)
      2 If i ever design or otherwise have any say with a public building (not a church) i will make sure that somebody finds a Qibala Compass and marks Mecca
      3 Im also for any short jokes (im 5 foot 6 btw and weigh about 220)

      Now you need to be able to take any jokes swinging your way also

      Joke about faith joke within the family but Joke about Doctrine and there will be HELL TO PAY

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    39. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by selven · · Score: 1

      People dying from sharks is bad. But if only 10 people die from sharks every year, do we really need to worry about it?

    40. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Brad+Mace · · Score: 1

      10% of FOSS developers are black, do you think that would make nigger references OK as long as we kept them under 1%? If 5% of FOSS developers are gay, do you think that allows up to 0.5% faggot references?

      No, that wouldn't be ok either. But it also does not make the entire FOSS community racist or homophobic. The author of the article, along with many of his supporters here, seem quite willing to label all men in IT as sexists based on the comments of a few classless idiots. Which is, you know, kind of sexist.

    41. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by charlieo88 · · Score: 1

      To which FOSS projects do you contribute?

    42. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by the_womble · · Score: 1

      The point is that there are plenty of developers of various ethnicities, as well as gays, despite trolls making offensive comments about them. If the gays can tolerate it why not the women?

      We could also do with some more real data. For example, what proportion of paid FOSS developers are women, and what proportion of volunteer FOSS developers are women?

    43. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      If there are groups of people who don't approve of pornography, should others not post any pornographic material or content on the web? Would it be wrong if I posted Mohammed the prophet's picture on the web despite knowing that it would upset Muslims?

      Ultimately, none of us have the right NOT to be offended. Because no matter what you do, there will be some people who will be offended. If you believe that doing something is wrong, please don't do it and you could find like-minded people and get them not to do it as well.

      But I don't think anyone should be forced to adopt a politically correct view at all times - because a view considered politically correct today could be considered quite incorrect tomorrow.

    44. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by JPStroud · · Score: 1

      The point of the ".01% of comments" argument is not to justify those comments, but to illustrate that sexism does not seem to be integral to FOSS. The same argument can be made using your 10% black argument; if 10% of FOSS developers are black, and only 1% of comments or discussions have racist overtones, it can be safely assumed that racism is not an integral part of the FOSS movement.

      Of course there are sexists involved in FOSS, just as surely as there are racists, homophobes and any other type of bigot one can imagine. FOSS is made up of the whole, world-wide body of people who choose to participate; there is absolutely nothing standing in the way of a neo-Nazi who wants to upload the mp3 player s/he just wrote.

      The author of the article, on the other hand, is making FOSS sound like an organization whose leaders are specifically not allowing women to participate. When the only thing necessary to participate is a computer, an internet connection and the will to program something that will be distributed for Free*, the concept that anyone at all can be kept out against their own will is patently ridiculous.

      Maybe women aren't by-and-large attracted to FOSS. Maybe there are social pressures that discourage it. Maybe women who ARE interested find it more difficult to join a particular project because the people who run that project are, themselves, sexist. None of these things are even remotely reminiscent of the intrinsic sexism that was present in, say, 19th and 20th century business. It's a hell of a lot easier to start your own project fork on github or freshmeat than to break into an industry where your clients are as likely to be sexists as your competition.

      Anyway, even if there are sexists involved in FOSS (pretty much guaranteed, as is any other form of bigotry), the fact that they exist does NOT indicate an "industry prejudice".

      --
      -- Joshua
    45. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

      That is all great, until the day you get a bigoted joke or comment against you.

      Most majorities will never get the hurt it causes, but then when people on those majorities experience life as a minority (a great example is British immigrants to Spain or France), they realize how wrong they were, once they experience the discrimination and "jokes" on their own skin.

      --
      IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    46. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by lukas84 · · Score: 1

      That is all great, until the day you get a bigoted joke or comment against you.

      I've heard plenty of jokes about Swiss and fat people. I don't have an issue with either.

    47. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      As a gay man, I occasionally bump into faggot references. Yet, it doesn't hurt me one bit. Why would it, they're only words, not even specifically directed at me.

      If one guy in a thousand makes generic comments about $randomgroupthatyoubelongto, but not aimed specifically at you, and you perceive that as hurtful and a reason to start a crusade, then I think there may be an issue with how you perceive things and you having too much time on your hands to start a crusade.

      Kindly stop trying to make my world a politically correct boring hell.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    48. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Offhand, I can think of at least four or five other possibilities.

      But that's because you hate women!!!

    49. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've linked (1) to a link (2) referencing a presentation (3) by ONE GUY at a rather small meeting (200 people).

      Yes, that is what the word "example" means. One instance. If you would like more examples, perhaps you should ask for them instead of (apparently) assuming that no more exist.

    50. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone have some stats on the percentage of FOSS developers that are Jewish, Arab, or Mexican

      Jews love making lists and stats of Jews.

    51. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the point is that sexism isn't a problem internal to FOSS, it's a societal problem, systemic in nature. It's not limited to FOSS, so don't try to fix it simply in the context of the FOSS community.

    52. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      It seems that there's a bit of that going on both sides - try posting on a feminist blog and disagreeing with the author as a man. Even money you get deleted.

      Oh, no argument here. I'm not claiming that feminists are immune from the desire to never see themselves as wrong. (Although I think you're reading the wrong feminist blogs if they're simply deleting respectful disagreement!) But the wrongdoing of some feminists doesn't excuse the wrongdoing of some within the FOSS movement...

      -Trillian

    53. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      Women in the world: 55%. Women in commercial software development: figures vary, but somewhere from 10% to 35%. Women in F/OSS volunteer development: 1% to 3%.

      suuuuure, F/OSS doesn't have its own particular problems.

    54. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably.Yes sexism exits in that nebulous 'out there' that they're talking about, anyone who's read this or any other board knows that, but it's more prevalent in the IT community as a whole than in FOSS.

      They're probably lumping gamers into it too. There's a lot of sexism in that community, mainly because it reflects mainstream culture more closely. It's very much more prevalent in mainstream culture.

      The local department stores are all doing the pink frilly dolls thing for the girls toy section again. That wouldn't really be a problem except that the content is pretty much the same as it was in the 50's. Any girl who's looking for something not relating to clothes, dolls, or maybe home goes to the boy's section just as they did when I was young.

      If they want to find out what's causing the stink in the building they should look first at the 7-ton elephant standing in the middle of the ballroom. The majority rules and the majority clearly does not have any interest in girls beyond the fashion, home, and sex.

    55. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      who needs to excuse it? FOSS isn't a homogenous thing and it's not really a social movement; some projects are better than others in dealing with women - if you want to try and change that, good luck: it's hard and thankless work, and you don't get to dictate to anybody to get it done.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    56. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by npsimons · · Score: 1

      So that ONE instance is repeated over and over (and linked to) as "evidence" of "sexism" instead of being seen as what it really is:
      ONE instance out of thousands of non-sexist presentations.

      Here's the deal: we should not tolerate this. People who give "presentations" like this should be heckled; they should be called out by the community. It doesn't matter how "talented" they may be; for every "little" act of offense they do, that repulses thousands of developers (both female AND male) who could have easily performed the same development work. Even if you go by Spolsky or Graham standards, all it takes is the loss of 100 programmers to nullify the "contributions" of one "talented" sexist pig.

      Does it upset you when even one person gets tortured? Shouldn't we be holding ourselves to a higher standard, just as we hold our software to a higher standard? Sure, saying chauvinistic things isn't the same as torturing someone, but the principle is the same: some things just shouldn't be tolerated. The only way you get to be an asshole is a) if you don't scare away so many people that your attitude is a net lose in productivity and b) you are an asshole to everyone equally.

    57. Re:Like I said. 0.1% of the comments. by Monsuco · · Score: 1

      You've provided a nice illustration of the problem. If it turns out that, say, 10% of FOSS developers are black, do you think that would make nigger references OK as long as we kept them under 1%?

      Do you ever actually read usenet post or forums? They are filled with personal attacks. Calling some chick a bitch is far different than saying "all women are cunts".

  41. 1.5% isn't bad by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

    when you consider that there are no girls on the internet.

    --
    Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  42. Amusing inconsitency by amliebsch · · Score: 1

    The article invites us to draw conclusions from the fact that there is a dramatically higher percentage of females working in non-free programming as opposed to free software. Then it also throws out the fact that quality is dramatically higher in free software - but I assume we're not supposed to draw any conclusions from that correlation, eh?

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  43. Re:Hey women by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    I don't think you do. Because you do exactly what you accuse women of doing: stereotyping an entire gender based on what a few idiots are doing. Are you so insecure that you have to take every accusation personally that any woman brings against any man? And then extrapolate it to all women and all men?

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  44. Ubuntu “Karmic Koala” released for men by David+Gerard · · Score: 5, Funny

    THAWTELESS, West London, Monday — Canonical, Inc. has announced the release later this month of Ubuntu Linux 9.10, "Karmic Koala," to men.

    Project founder Mark Shuttleworth explained that "this stuff is difficult to explain to girls" and thought they'd have gotten the hint when he called 8.04 "Hairy Hardon." "Worrying about sexism in open source just detracts from the battle for Linux. So we've put the tits back into the default desktop. And arses."

    Crime-fighting geek Shuttleworth, who dresses as a billiionaire playboy by night, swore that plenty of women liked him lots and that he obviously wasn't unable to get laid or anything, having gotten seriously rich in the dot-com era, not to mention having gone into space. "Chicks dig that stuff. Trust me, I've met lots of girls. More than five!"

    Canonical Community Manager Jono Bacon echoed this sentiment on his blog. "We just don't understand how come women are 15% of all computer programmers but only 1% of open source programmers. It must be a bit complicated for them. That's why I've written this spontaneous blog post, completely unrelated to anything my boss may or may not have said, on all the fantastically talented women in free software, even if none of them seem to work much on Ubuntu any more. Also, I'm absolutely confident that saying I'm in a computer geek heavy metal band will get me lots of chicks too, even if their pretty little heads can't understand Linux."

    A special women's edition of Ubuntu 9.10 will be released on a bright pink CD. "It doubles as a makeup mirror!" said Shuttleworth.

    --
    http://rocknerd.co.uk
  45. Cathedral v Bazaar by R2.0 · · Score: 1

    I will state up front that I believe there is sexism withing the FOSS movement. However...

    I actually went back and read his original article (I know - suspend my membership) and the most glaring problem with his argument is his comparison with proprietary software companies. He bemoans that those organizations have a breat many more women, and why can't FOSS do the same? Well, here's some clues:

    1) "FOSS" is not an entity. It is a philosophy that is practiced by a number of organizations, some of which hardly merit the term.

    2) Backstopping employment of women in the proprietary software world is employment law. Microsoft MUST employ a certain number of women or get into legal trouble. But free software development is done largely by volunteers - very few people are being "employed". Note that I exclude the employees that work on FOSS as part of their position. Should they be excluded? Probably not, but it appears the original author did so, and this is a criticism of his essay.

    3) Participants in a FOSS project are largely self selected, with few obstacles or inducements other than personal interest and skill level. In situations like this, people tend to self segregate. That goes for race, gender, interests, whatever. You can't compel someone to participate in a FOSS project they don't like, for whatever reason.

    The author is trying to make a case for institutional racism to something that models itself on a completely different model. The "people" who participate in FOSS projects may be sexist, and their actions are probably driving away some women who would otherwise participate. But "institutional" solutions have a problem in that there is no "institution" involved here.

    People can be boors, and crude. If the other participants don't censure him, he'll continue. The solution is for individuals to act and speak up. If a lead developer continues to make comments about T&A, and it bugs you, leave - and take a copy of the code with you! In many ways, the ideas behind FOSS make it easier to take a personal stand - you can dissociate yourself without losing your work. I don't know if my ideas will "solve" sexism in FOSS, but you'll feel better about yourself.

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    1. Re:Cathedral v Bazaar by chromatic · · Score: 1

      Participants in a FOSS project are largely self selected, with few obstacles or inducements other than personal interest and skill level.

      Of course.

      If you talk to multiple women who seem likely to contribute to free software projects, how many of them will tell you that they do not feel comfortable participating in communities which demonstrate certain tendencies? I've heard that from quite a few potential contributors -- not solely women, but people with many characteristics which differentiate them from the average 20-30 something white upper middle class male with a taste for flamewar.

    2. Re:Cathedral v Bazaar by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      I was more referring to the fact that you can't compel people to behave a certain way when they are free to up and leave. But you have a good point - you can't compel people to join when they don't like the environment. The problem is more intractable than the author thinks.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  46. Worthless article by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    Not one specific case of sexism was described in that blog post. I'm damned if I know what this writer is talking about.

    I think a much bigger problem, from the point of view of /., is racism. As soon as an Indian or Chinese technical achievement is mentioned around here, the jokes start flooding in about curry and Chinese food and the way those people talk funny. It's as if the achievements of the Apollo program are almost of religious significance, but India launching satellites is considered a big joke. I wonder how much laughing these racists will be doing when a Taikonaut walks on the moon while America goes bankrupt.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:Worthless article by nomadic · · Score: 1

      I have been reading slashdot for 10 years and I have never noticed that. There is the occasion idiotic comment, but I have never seen "flooding." And I am someone who does believe there is a non-trivial amount of racism prevalent in the OSS community.

    2. Re:Worthless article by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      I find it very noticeable. Over the last nine years, on most stories I have had to wade through endless repetitions of the same stupid jokes to get to any informative comments of substance (nowadays I just have my filters set to downgrade anything modded 'funny'), and on stories about the technical achievements of the developing world there is a far greater proportion of those attempted jokes that are racist. It doesn't seem to stop them from getting modded 'funny' though.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    3. Re:Worthless article by story645 · · Score: 1

      There is the occasion idiotic comment, but I have never seen "flooding."

      Wade through the comments on any post concerning outsourcing.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
  47. OK, so the algorithm is by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    There aren't many FOSS web sites devoted to feminist issues
    AND
    the few that do exist have declining membership
    AND
    many people have vigorously denied that they are sexist, some of whom have been pretty darn mean about it, in fact,

    THEREFORE

    FOSS is sexist

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
    1. Re:OK, so the algorithm is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an anti-semite.

      Prove you aren't.

      This sort of accusation is generally useless. One cannot prove a negative ('FOSS is not sexist'), and even if they could, it's not like the other side started by being rational. Doing the only thing possible, asking for examples, using statistics, comparison... gets decried as sexist in itself. So, tell me, how exactly ARE we supposed to reply?

      We're not. That's what the politically-correct crowd wants: censorship. Every last one of them. So when you claim to be a feminist, think that maybe any negative response you get is because of your self-chosen title, more than anything else.

  48. Not complaining? by zerobeat · · Score: 1

    You say women have it worse, so you are not complaining? But the sentence above is a long list of your complaints. Hey I agree with you, sexism anywhere is only unproductive and goes against the ethos of FOSS - but those two sentences in the middle of your post has such sharp hypocrisy, it cut me in half. Just because you are a boy, you don't have to belittle the prejudice you have suffered so the girls can look more important. It sux you have been slandered for defending women - complain about it! Z/

    --
    What other people think of me is none of my business
  49. No, he's mistaken. by argStyopa · · Score: 0

    "But the real flood of emotion comes from the anti-feminists and the average men who would like to deny the importance of feminist issues in FOSS. "

    They "deny" the importance? HOW DARE THEY?!!

    Doesn't that statement beg an enormous question - if feminist 'issues' have an inherent importance in FOSS at all?

    Flame me if you want, but to me the answer's simply: no.

    Pardon me, but it's SOFTWARE. And specifically, we're not even talking about actual coding, this is about the paradigm of coding software as Free Open Source. Oh noes, the forums on FOSS have some mouth-breathers who pop wood at the idea there might be a woman reading the text. Hello? Who cares? If Nancy Codemistress feels it's so important to identify her gender there, she can take what she gets. If it offends her sensibilities, then perhaps she should log in as Dogbert next time?

    (And for those who are about to attack for saying 'why should she have to hide her gender?' - because it's irrelevant. Look, I didn't choose a "IMAREPUBLICAN" user name here either, think for a second about why - yet I don't bother asserting that I have some sort of 'right' to do so.)

    I don't approve of arrested-development retards trolling women but I'm also getting sick of us trying to legislate away stupidity.

    If women want to code for FOSS, great. If the basement-dwelling codegeeks scare them off, I think the planet will continue to turn and FOSS will lose out on some code contributors, as well as some validity as those who are driven away feed the rumormill about why they choose not to participate.

    That said, and probably many too many words later, I frankly don't care. Do I (or by extension, you the reader) REALLY think a single piece of code's utility/application has ever in the history of mankind, been decided by the openness of it's code-generating-community to outsiders? Particularly something as already marginal as FOSS?

    Even for navel-gazing nerdcakes, that's getting pretty damn obscure. To assert it's so relevant that it's some sort of controversy is laughable. Angels on a pin (of indeterminate gender OF COURSE).

    Is it just me, or do ardent feminists really seem like people who not only see, but LOOK for their particular 'flavor' of problem everywhere? Sure, they'd turn that on it's head and say that, ipso facto, sexism (against women) is EVERYWHERE. Um, ya. To me that's just a symptom of some sort of religious obsessiveness that makes my Born Again friends equally obnoxious, seeing God everywhere as well. Both take a practically theological level of certainty that crosses well into circularity.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:No, he's mistaken. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey "Feminists"!

      Don't talk to me about discrimination.

      I'm a Republican. Also a conservative Christian.

      Also Anonymous.

      First, put a stop to my being modded to oblivion on /., then you can talk.

    2. Re:No, he's mistaken. by don.g · · Score: 1

      It's really hard to see the bias against a group in society unless you're a member of it. You're not going to get all the crap that flies at a group unless you're a member of it; the unwanted comments, the insults. This applies to more problems than sexism; racism, discrimination against the poor... you name it. And discriminating against people on the basis of something other than their willingness to work on FOSS stuff *is* a problem for FOSS.

      Of course it's easy to say that "none of this is a problem" if you're not a member of a group that gets treated badly by large sections of society.

      And being a Republican doesn't count; to most of the outside world American politics look absolutely insane, and people can't tell you're a republican when they see you walking down the street.

      --
      Pretend that something especially witty is here. Thanks.
    3. Re:No, he's mistaken. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Angels on a pin (of indeterminate gender OF COURSE).

      Of course - angels are androgynes since they don't reproduce, right?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    4. Re:No, he's mistaken. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women have it easy. Compared to those of us disabled and autistic, at least. Yet I don't get no respect from these morons.

        - A geek.

  50. I predict.... by tilandal · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    that this 'discussion' will pretty much be the embodiment of the point Bryce was trying to make in his article. I look forward to reading page after page of how women are too sensitive, or aren't dedicated enough, or can't perform to the level of men, or can't respond to criticism, or should just hide the fact that they are women.

  51. Actually, you're a good example of that. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It took you 5 minutes to come up with only 4 examples. And you were specifically LOOKING for such examples.

    Here's the Linux Kernel Mailing List. http://lkml.org/ That's a few thousand comments without any sexism at all. It's all about the statistics.

    Your post was a perfect example of the problems with this "discussion".

    You aren't concerned with the statistics. And with the Internet, it is very easy for a single example of a sexist comment (whether it was intended to be sexist or not) to be shared between the people LOOKING for sexist comments.

    Again, if 1.5% of the FOSS developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

    1. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by sohp · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Sounds like you are full of Ire and Denial to me.

    2. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by baronben · · Score: 4, Interesting

      okay, how about 54 incidents? And that's with about 25 seconds of searching.

      And before you respond, tell me if you'll need a tractor to help you with all the goalpost moving you're doing.

    3. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by amicusNYCL · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK, screw the stuff I've already modded. This is getting ridiculous. You keep spouting this out:

      Again, if 1.5% of the FOSS developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

      I'd like you to prove that "only 0.1% of the comments" (which comments?) are sexist. Sexism is a lot more of an issue than you apparently think, and if you're going to continue in this thread stating that "only 0.1% of the comments" are sexist, then you need to prove that number. You will see sexist comments any time you have identifiable women working around programmers, that's just the way it is.

      If you want to throw around baseless numbers, you need to explain where you pulled those out from. Exactly what methodology did you use to determine that 0.1% of "the comments" are sexist in nature?

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    4. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by aztracker1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No.. if the general postings in online discussions are 2% sexist, but the postings in FOSS discussions are 0.1% that being the case, I'd say this is pretty clearly a non-issue being blown out of water. You don't get rid of racism by "making whitey pay" and you don't get rid of sexism by inflaming the issue at hand. The only way to battle ignorance is with intelligent discussion, and ignoring subversive ignorance. This entire thread of discussion can have no hope of anything other than polarizing the issue at hand.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    5. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by fahrvergnugen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow. You're really committed to being right about this. I'm going to try and explain it anyway, even though I'm fairly certain this isn't going to go anywhere with you. Maybe someone else will read this and Get It, because I'm almost certain that you won't.

      First, that 5 minutes included formatting the HTML for the reply and proof-reading. Not time-consuming, but in the context of 300 seconds, not exactly trivial either.

      Second: Because only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women, it has created a fraternal atmosphere where jokes such as Stallman's are an acceptable part of the FOSS society. This becomes self-perpetuating, because sexist jokes and attitudes become more acceptable in a homogenous culture. Meanwhile, apologists are free to say "Women are totally welcome, if they can hang with us," thus relieving themselves of the responsibility of creating an environment that is more welcoming toward outsiders. It's the woman's problem that she is offended and unable to be "one of the boys," and not the responsibility of those who are acting offensively.

      When the brave and the pioneering outsiders do come into the culture and attempt to change it so that it is more welcoming and they can be more comfortable, they are met with overwhelming resistance. Some of it, such as the Ruby pr0n presentation or the continued adulation of booth bunnies, is brazen. Other opposition, such as your own, is more subtle. You are insisting that there is nothing wrong with the current way things are done, that there is no reason to change, that there is no evidence of institutional sexism in the FOSS world, and that accusations of such are outlandish. Meanwhile, the number of women involved in the movement remains the same paltry 1.5%, because the established culture that excludes women remains static. Nothing is done accommodate those who would otherwise join the movement, were the movement itself not structured so as to be exclusionary.

      Third: There is an issue of magnification that disappears when you go hiding behind the statistics. For every woman who is willing to stick it out in the face of something like Shuttleworth's comments, there are uncounted numbers who hear the message loud and clear: They are not welcome as FOSS developers. It doesn't matter if only 0.1% of the traffic on the kernel list is sexist, because it only takes a few to chase away many. If a small number of men project a clear message that women are not welcome, and they are not shouted down by ten times as many other men, then the message is deafening: Those few are our mouthpieces, and we are content to let them speak for us. In this instance, lack of public disavowal is seen as tacit agreement.

      It's hard admitting that you're part of something that hurts people, especially if it's something you love. I understand. The initial reaction of denial that I had was much the same, but all the denial in the world doesn't make it any less true. The FOSS movement is changing its attitudes toward sexism much more slowly than the field of computer science and IT in general, but we can't stay put forever. It's my feeling that we're entering a period of growth, and growing is painful. But the potential reward is great. Right now, the best and brightest minds of half our population are smart enough to tell us to fuck ourselves, because they won't put up with our shitty, sexist attitude. If we get smart in return and create a culture where they are welcome, I guarantee the results will be more than worth it.

      --
      Even Jesus hates listening to Creed.
    6. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by DrLang21 · · Score: 1
      Among these "incidents" I find things like "A Rape in Cyberspace is a famous paper by Julian Dibbell about the online rape of a group of LambdaMOO users by another user."

      They say he raped them that night. They say he did it with a cunning little doll, fashioned in their image and imbued with the power to make them do whatever he desired. They say that by manipulating the doll he forced them to have sex with him, and with each other, and to do horrible, brutal things to their own bodies.

      This is either fiction or stupidity.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    7. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Gudeldar · · Score: 1

      I won't deny that there are sexists in the FOSS community, but what I'm more interested in is if a higher percentage of men in the FOSS are sexists than the general population. I'd be willing to guess at LEAST 20% of males in the general population hold sexist attitudes. I bet you would be surprised by the number of women who are sexist against women too.

    8. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      They bitch about GoDaddy's advertising. How about just turning on the TV and bitching about advertising in general? Most advertisements are designed to have some sexual imagery. It is known that this works on both men and women. If anything, I would find GoDaddy's advertising to be sexist against men since it targets primal irrational behavior to trick men into signing up.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    9. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Not all of those have anything to do with FOSS. One of them, for example, is about Electronic Gaming Monthly going out of business and redeeming unused partial subscriptions with issues of Maxim. Another is about GoDaddy's advertisements.

      But I don't have time to parse them all. Could you go through the list and pick out the incidents which (a) actually have something to do with FOSS, and (b) indicate a prevalence of sexism in the FOSS community that goes beyond there being occasional assholes in the community in proportions similar to those found in real life?

    10. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct. But the approach needs to be "Hey FOSS, let's be on the forefront of tolerance in our community - here's how we can improve." Not "Sexism in FOSS? You bet! Here is a list of unforgivable sins! All of you should feel badly about yourselves and do whatever we say."

      Yes, charges of sexism are often met with ire and denial. Partly because when you blame an entirely community, you are necessarily blaming a huge percentage of relatively or completely innocent people. By definition those are people who don't like being labeled "sexist". Ire and denial are appropriate responses for the wrongly accused. Remember, *you* think you've accused a "community", but that's just a word. The individuals that actually make up the community each believe you have personally accused *them*. You're hearing from those people.

    11. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      Jeez. The only thing missing there is Lenna.

    12. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to throw around baseless numbers, you need to explain where you pulled those out from. Exactly what methodology did you use to determine that 0.1% of "the comments" are sexist in nature?

      Eh? You are the one defending the claim that FOSS is sexist. It is logically on you to PROVE the numbers.

      Linux mailing lists

      There, I've provided hundreds of thousands of examples of non-sexists comments. You'll need to provide 100 sexists examples to even reach 0.1% and that is only assuming 100,000 non-sexists comments. Open it up to other languages, all the distros, and you'll likely need to provide 10,000+ sexists examples to reach 0.1%.

      But perhaps you don't understand the numbers, so for comparison:

      Number of Americans: ~300,000,000

      Number of Violent Crimes committed in America in 2008: 1,382,012

      Ratio: 0.4%

      Based on your logic, it would be fair to say that "Americans are violent criminals"

    13. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by nyri · · Score: 1

      okay, how about 54 incidents? And that's with about 25 seconds of searching.

      You are not even wrong. First, it took much longer as you are linking to a page containing the list. Somebody else did the work and I bet that it took her more than 25 seconds. Second, the page is not a sample. It is a list of all such "incidents".

      More over, your list of "54 incidents" is pathetic. For example, I would like you to defend this case as a blatant example of sexism in the Open Source Software Community.

      --
      Jari Mustonen

    14. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again, what fraction of total messages do these 54 messages compose? No one is denying that there are sexist people. That is something that will never change. However, what percentage of all messages are sexist? I think khasim is being generous with a 0.1% estimate. LKML has had over five thousand messages this month alone. Let's add in all the other FOSS projects, and what percentage of the total are sexist? When 0.1% of messages are sexist but there are millions of comments to choose from, it is rather easy to find thousands that are sexist.

    15. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by hazem · · Score: 1

      That was a fantastic post, and spelled out the problem succinctly.

      Another reply mentions that the approach from this article paints a lot of innocent people as guilty. But a big part of the problem is that even if the sexist behaviors are committed by a minority, the "innocent" majority that stands by and does nothing are still contributing to the problem.

      I wish I could give you mod points instead of this reply.

    16. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      I looked through a few of these '54 incidents', and some don't have anything to do with FOSS (GoDaddy.com advertising? A vitual rape on a MUD, over fifteen years ago?), and many others are so tame I'm amazed anyone bothered to report them (a guy asked if the audience would rather search for a victoria's secret lingerie model, or a swimsuit model?)

      This is pretty weak evidence.

    17. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Lena is not a "thing"! She is a living, breathing person, you sexist!

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    18. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by ojustgiveitup · · Score: 1

      Sorry khasim, you seem like a reasonable fellow, but you've posted this so many times as if it is somehow the nail in the coffin of the argument that I think it deserves a response. Flatly, your statistics are complete bullshit.

      First of all, the percentage of females in the FOSS community is completely irrelevant. If you get a group of dudes together in a room to talk shit about women, the fact that the percentage of women in the group is 0.00000% has no bearing on whether or not the group has sexist tendencies. The amount of sexism you are "allowed" in a group is not somehow proportional to the percentage of women in that group. I don't know what else to say about it than to reiterate that it is a completely irrelevant point.

      The second part of your point is better - namely, you say that only 0.1% (totally made up number, but whatever) of the comments are sexist, and that's pretty good. I agree, if you're right that 0.1% of all FOSS related commentary is sexist, that is really pretty good, and while it's probably impossible to get the numbers to back it up, I'd say it's better than the population at large. However, this isn't a victory for the FOSS community, it's a defeat for the population at large. Being less bad than average does not make you good. We should strive for 0%, we should strive for 100% acceptance of all the various backgrounds of the members of our community. 99.9% is good, but it's not *that* good.

      That's the REAL problem we'd like to solve. We'd like to do much better.

    19. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      Then how come she looks so blockish all the time?

    20. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by baronben · · Score: 1

      But that's exactly what the actual article this story is based on was about. Someone raised the issue in a very calm and understanding manner. He didn't accuse the entire community of being sexist, but did bring up the issue that there are some implicit points that could be constructed as sexist by many members of the community, yet be seen as innocent jokes by the people who made them. And now we're in a flamewar.

      This is actually a very big point for a lot of people working to end the more subtle forces of racism and sexism in our society. We're mostly beyond the point of abject and visible racism, sexism and homophobia. But, it's still a major part of our society. A lot of people who don't face jokes about how women should be in the kitchen making dinner (speaking of which, this'll be my last post in the thread because I have to go and cook a delicious thanksgiving dinner) don't see it as sexism, because it doesn't effect them. It's just a joke that they made. Same thing with saying that something's gay or faggy.

      But, when it's done over and over again, it's not really a joke. So, I think a lot of the people talking about sexism in FOSS aren't asking you to change your entire life just to make sure no one in the world is ever offended again. But just to think about how other people might read what you write, and to put in the smallest modicum of effort so that people read what you actually mean instead of being turned off by how you say it.

    21. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      You are the one defending the claim that FOSS is sexist.

      No I'm not, I'm asking the parent to prove his assertion.

      You'll need to provide 100 sexists examples to even reach 0.1% and that is only assuming 100,000 non-sexists comments. Open it up to other languages, all the distros, and you'll likely need to provide 10,000+ sexists examples to reach 0.1%.

      This isn't just about statistics - many of the comments that are posted are completely non-sexual in nature, you can't post a comment like "how do I compile a driver", and assume that comment is either sexist or not sexist, it's completely unrelated to gender at all. In order to make your numbers mean something, you need to take the total number of comments as the total number of comments that have anything at all to do with gender. This isn't about injecting gender issues where there aren't any, it's about looking at the incidence of anti-female comments when gender is an issue.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    22. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by raddan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yeah, but let's be fair-- some of those things on that page are a stretch. For example, Lawrence Summers. I'll get to that momentarily.

      Conversations about race and gender inequality are highly politicized, and many people are very sensitive-- I'd say overly sensitive-- to these issues. Heck, many people have a right to be sensitive. Gender and race discrimination was openly accepted and practiced for a long time.

      But there are two problems with the continued antagonism on with these issues:
      1. For people like myself, who were born into a country where overt gender and race discrimination are on the decline, people who continue to press these issues as if nothing have changed look to me like they're pressing for "special treatment".
      2. What are these people looking for? Recognition of a problem or special treatment? Special treatment is the antithesis of the political philosophy of this country, where "equal standing before the law" is what we mean by "equality". I understand that there are now and have been injustices against certain groups of people, and that those things affect the prosperity of future generations, but does giving one group of people preference over another actually solve the underlying problem? My opinion is that affirmative action merely drives long-standing conflict even deeper.

      Getting back to Lawrence Summers-- if you're not familiar with the story, he was essentially pushed out of the Harvard presidency for openly speculating about the causes of the small number of women in science. His mistake was speaking to a gathering of academics as if they were, in fact, scientists. Reading this article makes it clear that he was saying: here are some possible causes; we need further research to establish a link. He mentions an anecdote with his daughter-- they gave her trucks, but she ended up playing with the trucks as if they were dolls, calling them "daddy truck" and "baby truck". Any scientist worth their salt would be intrigued by this behavior. Of course, this incident cannot be generalized, but it should make you ask "why?". Is it really unreasonable to think that men and women, who served in certain specific capacities for millennia of human history, might actually be better suited toward those roles? The answer may be 'no', but science must be allowed to ask the question. Nancy Hopkins, who walked out on Summers' talk, later said that ''I would've either blacked out or thrown up" had she not left. That sounds like hyperbole to me. The appropriate response as a career scientist would have been to counter Summers with evidence and scientific argument.

      With regard to the 54 incidents you mention, this is a classic case of finding problems when you're looking for them. As other people have pointed out, the number of incidents that can be called "sexist" in FOSS mailing lists appears to be vanishingly small. 54 incidents out of how many millions of conversation threads? Come on. The rational thing to do is to give us hard data, and then make your case. The link above is a laundry list of grievances; not science. But if you can make the case scientifically, showing us good evidence, we'll listen. That's the rational approach.

    23. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I don't consider that to be finding 54 incidents in 25 second. That would be like me saying "atomic elements are easy to discover. Look...I just discovered 110 elements in 15 seconds: http://www.elementsdatabase.com/"

      What you linked to was a compilation that was produced by other people, and it was the culmination of a LOT more than 25 seconds of searching (through what was likely 100's of thousands of non sexist posts).

      As far as your moving goalpost criticism, you might want to pay more careful attention. khasim (the guy you were responding to) has been asking the same "0.1%...what problem are you trying to solve" question since his very first post in this story. Go look at his profile if you don't believe me. He never asked for 1 or 2 or even 54 incidents. He asked for anything that amounted to anything significant....like more than his 0.1% figure. So far, I still haven't seen that request met. 54 is a drop in the bucket. There are plenty of project that each have more than 54000 comments in their forums, much less all FOSS projects combined.

    24. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      It's obvious, all the male compression experts made her look like that.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    25. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by jesset77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know if GP has his heels dug in or not, but the core point he makes is valid. Grabbing links from a cherry picked collection of events deemed to be sexist is a form of data searching. When you come back with 5 links, it sounds very much as though you are saying "look, 5 out of 5 of these examples are sexist", and you are certainly ignoring tens of millions of publicly archived mailing list, forum, and irc comments.

      I hear your impassioned plea that if there is a problem, we should have the courage to fix it. I actually don't see GP explicitly disagreeing. He is posing no alternate explanation as to the low figure of female representation in our community. What he is asking is "if female participation is at 1.5%, and anti-female speech is at 0.1%, then what action do you expect us to take?" also, implicitly: "If you disagree with my figure of 0.1%, then show me a fairly picked sample where more than one out of a thousand communications are sexist in nature." Free communication does mean that trolls will be able to open their mouths as well. The best we can do is decry them or mod them down, try to keep them banned from our lists, but erasing them from existence is beyond our power. You can't sway them and you can't "make up" for them. The only thing anyone can do (within my knowledge of present policy and technology) is to try and ignore them and starve them.

      I think someone above made reference to Stallman being sexist, too. Yep, I would certainly believe that. Unfortunately, I don't see a way to excise him from the community short of putting GNU out of business, and I've been wanting to do that long before the topic of sexism ever came across my desk. Still, allegations of Henry Ford being anti-semite (damn me if I can't find a reliable citation for that just now) will have an equally difficult time changing the name of the company he founded today.

      So, let us recouch GP's question in an actionable form. Can we have any/some of the following:

      * Examples of > 0.1% by posting volume sexism from a fair sample pool?

      * Examples of the community favoring sexist behavior anywhere, as opposed to communal opposition to nut-job comments

      * What community members can do (or what policies can change at the community admin level) to alleviate sexism. (We cannot clearly see what to do in response to allegations like this if we cannot comprehend in what way we are being sexist)

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    26. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The title was Sexism: Open Source Software's Dirty Little Secret. It contained lines like, "Sexism is systemic in FOSS, and has been for years" and it considered lower-than-non-FOSS female involvement to be prima facie evidence of sexism, or even to be sexism itself. It also spent about half of its words talking about how the response was going to be denial. That is not a calm and understanding manner. It was not a constructive article in the least.

    27. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by UnConeD · · Score: 1

      If you want to talk statistics, then you need to contrast the figure of 1.5% for open source with the 30% in IT professionally who are women. That means that all the social and cultural factors that keep women away from computers apply to those 30%. That also means the other 28.5% are choosing not to do FOSS for very different reasons.

      The real issue is that a lot of men on the internet act like they're in a boys club and pretend that everyone shares their interests. Seeing sexual imagery in a conference presentation isn't just crass and alienates women, it also alienates all the men in the audience who don't care for it. It's going to make people feel excluded, perhaps because they are a woman, because they are gay, because they're married, etc. Instead of promoting diversity, you're just narrowly aligning the community with its most dominant demographic.

      This is a problem for FOSS because the 'boys club of the internet' has very strong limits on its growth. Beyond a certain level, you simply cannot grow a community's focus and presence without reaching out to a more diverse audience. And this requires raising the level of discourse several notches above the lowest common denominator on the internet. It requires a serious effort, and people need to speak up and respect each other's opinions to do so. It's also something that's easily derailed by a few bad apples, because every instance of sexism needs to be countered with a much larger effort in order for the community to retain its outwardly friendly appearance and reputation.

      That's why it is incredibly important for the community to police itself and to aggressively do damage control whenever people do get upset. Arguing about whether something is sexist is exactly the wrong thing to do, because it's too late: people's feelings are already hurt. Denying this means you're sending a minority in the community a signal that they are not important and that their opinions do not matter.

    28. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by barbariccow · · Score: 1

      In July 2009, at science fiction convention Readercon, a flyer was distributed for next year's Readercon, saying This IS your father's Readercon. This did not appeal to many fans, who feel that fandom is already sufficiently focused on old men to the exclusion of women and the younger generation. Oh wow, somebody used a play on words on the phrase "This ain't your fathers...". Somebody notify the UN about such horrific treatment to women!

    29. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by phlamingo · · Score: 1

      Pardon me, but I looked at most of your 54 incidents. A fair number are from comics, gaming, or science fiction communities. Not, strictly speaking, FOSS.

      One of them is about a real-life massacre at an engineering school. Are you suggesting that if Mark Shuttleworth were more "evolved," the killer would have killed 7 men and 7 women, instead of 14 women?

      Yes, I know, social climate, blah blah. But, seriously, was the killer contributing to Linux Kernel patches? If not, why is it included in this discussion?

      Don't weaken your case by diluting it.

      Also, perhaps a major factor in the heat of this discussion is the perception that the FOSS community is uniquely sexist. Would this whole debate evaporate if we said something like "There is some sexism in Western culture. IT in general, and FOSS in particular, is not free from some level of sexism."

      Or is the heated discussion the whole point?

      --
      I had forgotten how much cooler teenagers look when they are smoking. Oh, wait ...
    30. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      What are "we" supposed to do when "we" see RMS being an idiot and eating the stuff between his toes? Fire him?

      Why am I responsible for some Ruby presentation that I personally find embarrassing (as a male, who would have thought!), just because I use linux and have some projects on google code?

      Free software is anarchy, for better or worse. There is no "movement" or "society", if you don't like something, you can fork it. There might be neo-nazis writing the best microkernels and we couldn't do anything about it. It is impossible to exclude people. But that is true for women as well as for misogynist basement nerds.

    31. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What the hell.
      What sort persecution complex do you have to have to spend your life compiling lists of anonymous people offending you on the internet?
      http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Incidents
      It should be pointed out that your 54 examles of how the FOSS community is packed full of misogyny includes many shining examples of the FOSS community being sexist, just from a quick look....

      Go daddies advertising campaign(nothing to do with FOSS)
      A video game about a Fat Princess(nothing to do with FOSS)
      Various companies employing "booth babes" because that's apparently evil(nothing to do with FOSS)
      some tripe about a comic strip at defcon which had an airhead female character.(nothing to do with FOSS)
      people getting sent copies of Maxim instead of some gaming mag(nothing to do with FOSS)
      Some summit which apparently didn't get many women turning up (at least it is actually related to FOSS)
      A shocking one about some guy in quebec killing a lot of women.(nothing to do with FOSS though)
      Feminists getting pissed because dell tried to market to the large female demographic that likes pink.(nothing to do with FOSS)
      Someone pissed that people didn't want to make a usenet group comp.women....because there's a comp.men group...(nothing to do with FOSS)

      are we seeing a bit of a theme yet?
      There are some genuine "incidents" in there but they're swamped by bullshit.

      I'm not even through a third of them and most seem to have little or nothing to do with FOSS or they amount someone getting offended because some pathetic young/old men drew penises on his presentations or had his desktop background set to some random scantily clad female which of course means he hates women and thinks women can't do anything(honestly that seems to be the logic).

      One troll gets his own "incident" even though he appears to be nobody of any import or anything to do with FOSS.

      If this kind of trivial crap is what's keeping women out of FOSS then all I can say is "Toughen up".

      You'll see more misanthropy,misogyny,misandry, every flavor of "ism" etc etc in pretty much any community.

      There is plenty of sexism in the world, there is plenty of discrimination in the world but a social group based around "show us the code" where people can choose everything about how they present themselves isn't exactly the best place to look if you really want to get your days worth of righteous indignation.

    32. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by martyros · · Score: 1

      Again, if 1.5% of the FOSS developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

      First, have you talked to any of the 1.5% and asked them if they experience sexism?

      Secondly, sexism isn't binary. Some things, like joking about rape or putting up naked pictures are on one end of the scale; those are in the 0.1%. But there are a much larger number of interactions: posts, subtle body language, even just the lack of encouragement that might be present for men but not for women. Those aren't as obvious, but their total effect is significant.

      Finally, consider how many posts an active FOSS developer might read in a week. Let's say that a woman is moderately active in a project, and has 50 interactions (e-mail, forum post, IRC, &c) per day. That's about 1500 interactions per month. Now, let's assume that your 0.1% is accurate. That's 3 overtly sexist interactions every 2 months. Now add to that the 2% of subtly sexist interactions, and the 5% of unintentionally sexist stuff, and ask yourself: how much crap can a person put up with before they're sick of it? How long would you work for pay for a company where someone insulted you three times every two months, much less do volunteer work in such an organization?

      That's the problem some people are trying to solve: Computer science culture, and FOSS even more so, is extremely discouraging towards women. The vast majority of it is completely unintentional, but it all adds up.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    33. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      My god.

      I just finished scanning through that list of 54 "incidents" and I've come to the conclusion that that wiki is packed solid with poeple who get off on being offended.
      There were a few justified ones but the majority are trivial crap like someone not liking that a name for something was in the masculine form or more commonly sexuality of any kind be it male, female or both.
      Is there anything in the world that isn't offensive to these nutters?

    34. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like this example:

      http://freebsd-image-gallery.netcode.pl/?gallery=Daemonette

      Am I sexist because I like that?

    35. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      If it's fiction, then Lawrence Lessig did a botch-up job on "Code". If you read it, it describes something of how the code worked, and how it allowed for such an exploit.

      Having read Lessig's explanation, I found the story to be both plausible and creepy. I completely understand why the members of the community found it so disruptive.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    36. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by rho · · Score: 1

      For every woman who is willing to stick it out in the face of something like Shuttleworth's comments, there are uncounted numbers who hear the message loud and clear: They are not welcome as FOSS developers.

      "Stick it out in the face of..." Seriously?

      The message "They are not welcome" is loud and clear? Seriously?

      While I'm all for a general air of civility, overreaching, like you do here, isn't helping. Actually, I wonder if you even know any women, or if you're just white-knighting. While the plural of anecdote is not data, I don't know many women who would be particularly bothered by the weak-tea examples of sexism I've seen mentioned so far. Most women seem to put their big-girl panties on along with the guys in their big-boy shorts and can take the occasional joke at their expense without fainting dead away. They're not "sticking it out," they're simply not as big a weenie as you think they are.

      The ratio of women in programming positions, Free or otherwise, very likely has nothing to do with sexism. There aren't many women garbage collectors either. What of it? There are some jobs that women as a rule do not want to do. I don't want to be a nurse, but scads of women do. They're not keeping me out of nursing with all the "Cathy" comics around the hospital break room.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    37. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      "The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread." Anatole France, The Red Lily (1894).

      Equality before the law has never been, and will never be, enough to demonstrate that a society is just or equitable.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    38. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by raddan · · Score: 1

      Equality before the law may not be a sufficient condition for a society to be just or equitable, but is a necessary one.

    39. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      That's why it is incredibly important for the community to police itself and to aggressively do damage control whenever people do get upset.

      Why would you do that? For every legitimate racist douchebag, there's a dozen thin skinned jerks spoiling for a fight. Sure, rein in the douchebags (although there's not that much that can be done with a determined d-bag), but the jerks need to grow a thicker skin. We've seen what happens when you let a vocal minority run roughshod over the majority, or did you really believe that everybody was pissed off over Janet Jackson's broken down junk?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    40. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just going to gently point out that Slashdot been known to run adverts for a Russian bride mail-order site (Anastasia, iirc).

      (evidence)

      On the day that there are Russian husband mail-order sites, then you can bawww about how some people just don't recognise equality when they have it.

    41. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed the best one:

      http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/A_Rape_in_Cyberspace

      A Rape in Cyberspace is a famous paper by Julian Dibbell about the online rape of a group of LambdaMOO users by another user.

              * "A Rape in Cyberspace" as published in the Village Voice in 1993
              * Wikipedia article about Dibbell's article

      ----------

      Wow way to cheapen the suffering of women who have actually been raped.

    42. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Summers' approach was idiotic for one reason: because he walked into a discussion held by a group of people who have been researching this shit for decades, and apparently started babbling in an ill-founded and unsourced manner about some anecdote to do with his daughter, a couple of stats he probably pulled out of The Economist, and an apparent suggestion that he's the first person to suggest actually, gosh, researching this shit.

      If he should've been kicked out for anything it was the sin of pretending to know more about a topic than he really did, picking a few stats, not reading widely enough to ground his observations in fact (for example, 'fewer girls than boys have top scores on science and math tests in late high school years' -- this is something that varies a lot between nations, and anybody who read around the area would know that) - and assuming that the people who actually research this stuff for a living hadn't his level of insight. First rule of public speaking: know your audience. OK, the first rule of public speaking is, 'Wear clean clothes and check you zipped all the way up before the session starts,' but 'Know your audience' is a close second.

      He apparently seemed to think that trolling with a few factoids/anecdotes was an appropriate means of provoking useful discussion - and he also either can't read an audience, does not know when enough is enough, or assumed that he was immune from the effects of his provocation. Summers, in short, is a failed troll - failed, because he did not exploit his abilities effectively, became seen as counterproductive, and was kicked off his soapbox. I'm not crying for a man who got bitten for trying and failing to insert his oversized boot into another community's discourse, and if I were you I wouldn't waste the effort either.

      By the way, it is also very interesting that he made the assumption that he did, when interpreting the observed behaviour of his daughter. For me the first thought that comes to mind in reading about his daughter's choice of nomenclature is 'that's an interesting choice of nomenclature, I wonder what characteristics she had in mind when picking those names.' For all you or I know, the reason was because one was large and one was small, and the kid was just picking an obvious metaphor. I don't actually care, but if I had wanted to investigate that behaviour I would have started off by checking existing research/asking researchers, and I do believe that had he approached the matter that way, researchers would have been ready and willing to discuss all the facets of the problem with him, and the whole discussion would have had a very different tone. In other words, sua culpa.

    43. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up, fuckers, or miss the point entirely of what oppression is about.

    44. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Internalist · · Score: 1

      You'll see more misanthropy, misogyny, misandry, every flavor of "ism" etc etc in pretty much any community.

      Yeah, but we're not talking about "hatred/dislike on the basis of intrinsic characteristics" here (viz. your "mis-X" examples)...you can dislike someone and still accept that they're highly competent (cf. many people's opinion of Theo de Raadt). The current brouhaha is about differential (i.e. worse) treatment on the basis of gender. I'm willing to just come out and say that there's none of that in the FOSS world as regards its overwhelmingly male membership..."obviously you can't code, you're just a dude"...

      [...] but a social group based around "show us the code" [...]

      One of the major points of this discussion is that what I just quoted is a fictive characterization of the FOSS community. Obviously there are places where the situation is better (e.g. the kernel mailing list), and worse (e.g. several recent keynote talks). The thing is people are people and sociological things will typically get in the way of impartiality. In this case, we're talking about when that manifests as discrimination against women. Which it does. But shouldn't.

      where people can choose everything about how they present themselves[...]

      Not sure about the relevance of this...

      --
      Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. -- Wernher von Braun
    45. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1
      That reminds me of an old quote:

      Misogynist: A man who hates women as much as women hate one another.
      --H.L. Mencken

      --
      SSC
    46. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, it is entirely analogous:

      The fact that 1,382,012 violent crimes were committed in America in 2008 almost certainly is a factor in the way in which Americans choose to live their lives, lots of little decisions, caution, behaviour modification... This despite the fact that most Americans are not violent criminals.

      The fact that however many bad attitudes were shown in a given community in a given amount of time is in general probably a factor in shaping the future demographic/culture of that community. This despite the fact that most people involved in that community do not have a bad attitude.

      That's why, as has been discussed to death in another thread, it doesn't require many bad apples to have an effect.

      Is that why people are having such a strong reaction to this discussion? Did you all think you were being personally described as sexist?

    47. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by skrolle2 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry I don't have mod points to bump you up, because you're one of the few little lights in this incredibly bleak discussion thread. The title of the article is " FOSS Sexism Claims Met With Ire and Denial", and just look at this thread, the overwhelming majority of posts are full of ire and denial. It's sad, but you kinda have to laugh about it.

      And talk about it, until people start seeing the institutionalized sexism, so that they can finally do something about it.

    48. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      [quote]Not sure about the relevance of this...[/quote]
      It's extremely relevent, sure you could probably dig up some info on me that hints at my gender/race/anything at all from things I've said in the past but for all you know I could be a 15 year old jewish boy living in a european farming village who likes to create ficticious identities online.

      The only thing stopping me from starting up my own FOSS project or joining one is my programming ability which as it stands I don't feel is quite up to par.
      Or do you really think that when I try to get my code into the repositories it's going to be rejected because someone thinks girls can't code.
      Or do you think when I ask questions about the API for some library I'm using my questions are going to be treated with derision until I convince them that I've got a penis?

    49. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually counter-intuitive. There's a certain amount of encouragement required to rid sexism and racism. You can't really be complacent about it, it''s not enough to just not call women bitches. You really have to encourage them a little bit, make them feel welcome, be just a little sensitive to nuanced conversations that might be taken the wrong way, take complaints of sexism seriously, don't just say things like "it was just a dumb blond joke". Cause a dumb guy joke is one thing, but when you're one guy of three hundred women and fifty of them are chastising your fragile male ego and generally disrespecting men it would be really easy to walk. I mean come on, how many FOSS developers sign with their MS certs? Think about it.

      Cyphercell - recovering misanthropist, you biased bag of seething shit.

    50. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, I'm not a woman and I'm not acquainted with any who feel pushed out of open source in any way. It does strike me that with the vast amounts of morons and assholes in the world that the amount of crap you're insisting on being a problem is relatively minor. I can see you believe that it illustrates some preconceived mindset on the part of the community but I think where you're going wrong is assuming you have any kind of mutual reality with the people with whom you are discussing this.

      My reality is, the folks in open source really are some of the more decent folks out there, they are doing something they believe in and in a rather non-sociopathic manner. I watch sociopaths run the businesses and government bodies with which I interact daily and I just don't generally see that kind of horrid stuff coming from OSS. Now are there some weirdos and jerks? Well sure there are, but really, is it that bad?

      I don't care whether I interact with all women or no women in open source. Maybe that makes me a bad person, but I just don't notice or care. I rarely look at slashdot usernames either, when I do it's usually just to see if it's the same person who'd made a previous post in the thread or not, I rarely try and identify gender.

      I do know most of the ways I've seen people go about "curing" sexism is guaranteed to fail, not because their mission is somehow poor but rather there communication skills are. There's good ways and bad ways to communicate a concept and if you are asking someone to maybe re-examine an already held belief you will never get very far if you express your concept poorly. I'm sorry, most people are horrid communicators.

      Men in many cultures also resent women's movements and women's movements aren't very sensitive as to why some men might feel that way (there are valid and invalid reasons one might do so). If you can't put yourself in the shoes of your adversary (I use the term loosely, I don't believe there's some mortal battle to be fought here) you are unlikely to either defeat or reconcile with them. Remember, if you're right and there is a problem, you are in the minority, if you truly want change you'll have to work tactically from that position. I'm not saying it's fair or right, just that it "is."

    51. Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. by mdzimm · · Score: 1
      You may have missed that there are other sorts of geeks in the world other than FOSS geeks. There are plenty of examples of FOSS sexism documented on the geekfeminism wiki, but it is by no means limited to FOSS.

      Regardless, the existence of non-FOSS examples of sexism has no bearing whatsoever on the existence of sexism in FOSS.

  52. Newsflash! by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1, Troll

    Overweight, socially awkward men with poor hygiene resent women. They really resent women who are smarter than them or are better at the things around which they derive self-esteem.

    The problem isn't that you aren't tolerant of women. The problem is that you're tolerant of the sad sacks who drive them away. FOSS needs a pecking order and it needs to keep the cretins at the bottom, where they belong. You're living Revenge of the Nerds but you're letting Booger call the shots.

    1. Re:Newsflash! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh look, finally a useful comment. This at least makes sense, and is broadly applicable. Assholes should at minimum be called out on their assholery, not tolerated.

  53. There, there now by PPH · · Score: 1

    Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible -- being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

    Have a little cry and get over it.

    But seriously: There's sexism in every industry. But the FOSS world tends to ba made up of lots of smaller companies. Where they don't have big HR departments, corporate policy manuals the size of the NYC phone book and mandatory quarterly sensitivity training. So the a*holes think they've got free reign to abuse women (and everyone else). And the businesses aren't wealthy enough such that anyone can bring a discrimination suite against them and hope to do any more than see them file bankruptcy and disappear. Or they're so small that everyone is a key person that they can't afford to lose.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  54. reports of ire and denial met with ire and denial by pezpunk · · Score: 0

    it's funny how defensive guys get when their sexism is pointed out to them. any woman who tries to talk about it is of course either just making excuses or is a lunatic with an agenda. the most astonishing aspect is how uniform and predictable the slashdot response is.

    --
    i could live a little longer in this prison
  55. Useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one cares. This is useless.

  56. Read what you just wrote. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You are ASSUMING that the claims of sexism are factual.

    Yet when the STATISTICS are presented to you, you claim that it is "ire and denial".

    That's exactly the dismissive attitude that allows the problem to continue.

    Again, when 1.5% of the developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you are trying to "solve"?

    1. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Statistics aren't everything. Statistically, 100% of people are going to die. Does that mean that we shouldn't work on ways to extend life and to promote good health? Isn't it all futile anyway?

      The 1.5% says to me that institutional sexism is involved. It's far more subtle than overt individual sexist acts, meaning that it's hard for most people to see, especially if they have no direct dealings with one of the few women involved in FOSS. I for one would love to hear from the women who browse Slashdot about their experiences, but I'm more likely to get a response of "There ARE no women on slashdot, tee hee!" which only proves my point.

    2. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      You asked for examples, someone got you 4 examples 5 minutes after you asked, and you immediately discard that as 'not enough examples'. That doesn't bode well for any kind of rational discussion.

      To answer your last sentence: Lets' rephrase (again) it to this and see if it rings some bells:

      " So, if only 1.% of the developers are negroid ... but fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are racist ... what is the real "problem" that exists? "

      Imagine that rather than having a naked chick every so many slides (as happened in a talk @ GoCaRuCo), you would have a picture of a negroid in chains animation pulling in the next slide of the presentation. Add a whip to the scene and it would make even a mostly white audience severely uncomfortable.

      I think we're just far more sensitive to racism than to sexism, which makes it a bit harder to pick up acts of sexism.

    3. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupiest. Analgoy. Ever. You might as will goodwin the thread and compare it to Nazis.

      How about, instead of "FOSS is sexist", proclaim what is actually happening: "A very small number of FOSS supporters behave unprofessionally and in a sexist manner."

      FOSS supporters: worldwide? 10 million? 50 million? more?

      Total "sexist" examples presented so far: less than 10

      Ratio: conservative estimate 1,000,000+ to 1

      If we admit those odds are relevant, then I could claim women are actually men since the estimated ratio of hermaphrodites in the general population is 100,000 to 1

      .

    4. Re:Read what you just wrote. by theelectron · · Score: 1

      I think we're just far more sensitive to racism than to sexism, which makes it a bit harder to pick up acts of sexism.

      Yeah! It's not like we are biologically hardwired to think about sex and procreation, so obviously sex should never be thought about by any random person. (end sarcasm) Think about that, and ask why racism seems like a more identifiable topic again.

    5. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      I can give as many examples, if not more, of sexism (and worse ...) coming from the people considered to be the luminaries in the Feminist movement. As it stands, I don't consider things like "All men are rapists and that's all they are," as being rational, sane, or anything BUT sexist in and of itself. I fear there's vastly more examples of this sort of thing from the crowd claiming it- projection, really.

      It's not that we're more sensitive to one or the other as you try to make the correlation to in your post. It's that you've got people willing to make accusations at the drop of a hat like "sexism" and then out the other side of their mouth make statements like Marilyn French made there in the "All men..." remark.

      No, I don't consider the crass crap pulled on that talk at GoCaRuCo acceptable- it's very definitely sexist. But one wonders if it's purely sexist or an inappropriate response to an equally inappropriate batch of claims about "sexism" in FOSS to begin with.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    6. Re:Read what you just wrote. by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      The 1.5% says to me that institutional sexism is involved. It's far more subtle than overt individual sexist acts, meaning that it's hard for most people to see, especially if they have no direct dealings with one of the few women involved in FOSS.

      Let's assume 1.5% (which I doubt very much). This leads the feminazi* and the paranoid to assume there's hidden and subtle bigotry everywhere. If 1.5% is visible, I'd say no more than 5% is hidden. It's a problem, yes, but it's easier to deal with on a case-by-case basis. (7.5% is hardly institutionalized.)

      I for one would love to hear from the women who browse Slashdot about their experiences, but I'm more likely to get a response of "There ARE no women on slashdot, tee hee!" which only proves my point.

      Slashdot is a bad representation of the OSS crowd. Slashdot is much, much more juvenile. Big OSS projects tend to be moderately professional, or at least emotionally mature. One needs no social or technical maturity to post on Slashdot. Yours was a strawman argument.

      * (There's nothing wrong with being feminist. The most vocal feminists have sometimes lost touch with reality. It is for these special people who hurt their cause that I reserve the term "feminazi". I also don't blame the paranoid, as there is hidden bigotry. I don't think there's that much, but it could crop up anywhere and anytime. I also haven't read the original article, and do not apply the derogatory term to him/her. There certainly are some in this thread, though.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    7. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Again, when 1.5% of the developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you are trying to "solve"?

      Because obviously a few comments couldn't possibly be indicative of an overall cultural attitude, and of course one or two comments couldn't be enough to drive women away in droves.

      Get a grip on yourself.

      This reminds me of an instance on the Debian mailing list a couple months back -- not this one, hmm... can't find it right now -- where a woman on the list dared to speak up against some sexist comments that were going on, and got flamed out of existence (certainly out of the Debian community) while the list "regulars" went on to make sex jokes for the next several days.
      And we wonder why there aren't more women in Linux.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    8. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Sycon · · Score: 1

      Not to say I disagree with you, but I wonder how you would feel if instead of a black person in chains pulling in the next slide, there was a white person. Do you think people would declare racism? Maybe a few. But most people would recognize it for what it is: a joke. I think the problem is that people are too sensitive.

    9. Re:Read what you just wrote. by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "Yet when the STATISTICS are presented to you, you claim that it is "ire and denial"... Again, when 1.5% of the developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you are trying to "solve"?"

      These "statistics" sound made-up. Where are you getting them from?

      Made-up numbers are not "statistics". Perhaps they are "conjectures".

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    10. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      I think a white person would be seen as a poor coder being whipped forward by the management ;-).

      The difference is that white people didn't recently go through mass slavery or suppression. That context to me makes a white man a joke and the black man not.

      Slavery ended in the 1860's in the USA. Woman gained voting rights as late as 1920. While slavery is far worse than not being allowed to vote, both are a quite extreme expression of inequality.

    11. Re:Read what you just wrote. by DoubleDownOnEleven · · Score: 1

      Statistics aren't everything. [snip]

      The 1.5% says to me [snip]

      Did your first point just invalidate your second?

      I think khasim brings up a good point. If your argument hinges on quoting a statistic and inferring all sorts of things from that, it seems fair to invalid it with another statistic.

    12. Re:Read what you just wrote. by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Do we need a 1:1 correspondence between women and sexist comments? ie, If 10% of the kernel Developers are Black, do you have to have the evil "N" word in 10% of the posts, in order to make the kernel list full of Racist bastards?

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    13. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You won't hear from most of the women on here, though, and here's one reason why:

      I've been on slashdot for a decade, and frankly the place is a lot more comfortable if you just post from a gender-neutral/apparently male viewpoint. That's one reason why there are no girls on the interbuttz - IMHO a good number of us have simply decided that the geek world is most bearable if you keep gender entirely out of the discussion.

      Which interestingly enough is more or less what half of the posts on here appear to be asking women to do ('look, ok, for us it's about the code so just keep your gender entirely out of the conversation and then we'll treat you as neuter.') Of course a small percentage of male posters aren't particularly good at keeping their gender out of the conversation, so what is really being requested is tolerance of one extreme and the sweeping of the opposite extreme under the carpet.

      That arrangement suits me okay, because I'm not here for my ego. Anonymous/pseudonymous contribution is an important mechanism to enable contribution by people who want to avoid entangling themselves in the bullshit diversions that would otherwise arise from their involvement. AFK pseudonymity is of course implausible, so the trick is a robust sense of humor, perspective, mildness of manner, patience and a non-confrontational approach. However, even though I can't get even slightly worked up about it, the fact that neuter-role-playing pseudonymity and see-no-evil is the best compromise available might imply that there is something a little bit screwed up in the metaphorical state of Denmark.

      Bottom line: rather than agonising about the topic - screw it, the world is bigger than Slashdot or F/OSS and there are many other sandpits in which to play. I assure you that women are in your slashdot posting on yr stories, but you'll mostly never know it, and not without reason.

    14. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot is a bad representation of the OSS crowd. Slashdot is much, much more juvenile. Big OSS projects tend to be moderately professional, or at least emotionally mature.

      Dream on, laddie.

      Seriously, with the exception of corporate-led projects, you're so wrong here that it actually hurts.

    15. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That thread you can't find on the Debian list is nothing! This reminds me of an instance on the Linux kernel mailing list a couple months back --- hmm... can't find it right now -- where a woman offered an elegant patch to fix a longstanding bug, and Torvalds told her to shut the hell up and get back in the kitchen, Shuttleworth suggested "Tits or GTFO," and Cox posted her employer's phone number encouraging people to harass her there. You'll just have to take my word for it. And we wonder why there aren't more women in Linux.

      There may be rampant sexism, but given the severity of accusing a group of it you owe us something more than something you faintly remember. Clearly Debian, as a whole, does have limits.

    16. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      The most vocal feminists have sometimes lost touch with reality. It is for these special people who hurt their cause that I reserve the term "feminazi".

      The Nazis killed millions of people in cold blood.

      Feminists have worked for equality for women. A handful -- a vocal minority -- have made rude bigoted comments about men.

      To suggest any that there is ANY COMPARISON AT ALL between feminists and Nazis, is jackassery of the highest order.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    17. Re:Read what you just wrote. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      The term "feminazi" is repulsive. In fact, anythingnazi is repulsive, unless:

      1) The people being described are self-proclaimed followers of the Nazi party, or

      2) The people being described are committing genocide, or openly advocating the same.

      Anything less is a slander to the people being described, and an insult to the people the Nazis killed.

      No, don't even try to justify it. You fail Entry Level Humanity 101, as does the fat sack of manure who first coined the term.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    18. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you're saying that women have such delicate feelings that one or two comments is enough to drive them away in droves?

      Interesting.

    19. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And we wonder why there aren't more women in Linux.

      I'd give anything if I could find but just one woman in Linux.

      [coward@alonelyplace] sudo find / -name "my dream girl"
      [coward@alonelyplace]

      :(

    20. Re:Read what you just wrote. by orngjce223 · · Score: 1

      I'll give you what you asked for, then - I'm a girl, and I say Slashdot tends to be dipped in testosterone and, at times, flings said testosterone in other peoples' faces for no discernible reason. These are often known as "flamewars".

      --
      Note: I was 13 when I wrote most of this. Take with several grains of salt.
    21. Re:Read what you just wrote. by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      I've been on slashdot for a decade, and frankly the place is a lot more comfortable if you just post from a gender-neutral/apparently male viewpoint. That's one reason why there are no girls on the interbuttz - IMHO a good number of us have simply decided that the geek world is most bearable if you keep gender entirely out of the discussion.

      Yep, I know quite a few women who work on FOSS who have never commented on Slashdot or Digg because they can't stand the sexism in the comments.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    22. Re:Read what you just wrote. by conureman · · Score: 1

      See Guys? You should behave yourselves.

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    23. Re:Read what you just wrote. by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      >This reminds me of an instance on the Debian mailing list a couple months back -- not this one [itwire.com], hmm... can't
      >find it right now -- where a woman on the list dared to speak up against some sexist comments that were going on, and got >flamed out of existence (certainly out of the Debian community) while the list "regulars" went on to make sex jokes for the >next several days.
      >And we wonder why there aren't more women in Linux.

      If you are on a public forum, you can get to hear a lot of nonsense. If all of that is going to upset you, then you are basically in a position where you cannot participate in any online forum - whether it is about open source or whatever.

      Example: If I am religious and there are a lot of people ridiculing God, I could opt to get really upset about it and sulk or I could deal with it. The same applies if you are an atheist and there are people making fun of atheists.

      I think people just need to grow a thicker skin. No, you don't have the right not to be offended.

      And one more thing - this may upset people, but men and women aren't exactly the same - they don't share the same interests and neither should they have to. I think it would be an interesting study to ask a large number of women programmers if they would like to work on open source projects.. and whatever be the answer, we should also ask them to specify the reason. I think we can learn much from it.

    24. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Rennt · · Score: 1

      "sex jokes" are enjoyed by women just as much as men (though usually the punchline is different).

      In a professional setting crass jokes are rightly avoided, but while corporatism has been encroaching on OSS the fact remains that most of the community by volume considers OSS to be "recreation" and even "social" in one way or another, and in this setting the odd tits and ass joke IS appropriate.

      Wouldn't expect to see this kind of behaviour at a IBM or Redhat conference - but a Debian mailing list? Bad example dude.

      Its only to be expected. Toughen the fuck up or get back in the kitchen ;)

    25. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So "boys will be boys" means there isn't sexism in OSS, and attitudes that might discourage women from participating?

      I think you just proved my point.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    26. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Rennt · · Score: 1

      Nah, I think you missed it - read my first line again.

      Telling racy jokes in a casual environment is not discrimination, or sexism, or any kind of *ism at all, it is simply vulgar.

      "Boys will be boys" - there is some truth in that, just as "girls will be girls", but it does not follow that women are not welcome because of it.

    27. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      I think people just need to grow a thicker skin. No, you don't have the right not to be offended.

      And again, why exactly is this attitude supposed to encourage women to come play in the OSS community?

      "Man up, ladies!" is not exactly creating a welcoming environment.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    28. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Telling racy jokes in a casual environment is not discrimination, or sexism, or any kind of *ism at all, it is simply vulgar.

      Telling racy jokes in a casual environment is exactly the kind of behavior that discourages female participation in FOSS. Most women feel uncomfortable with jokes like Stallman's (which was pretty mild really), ESPECIALLY in male-dominated environments, and the stuff on this list was considerably less mild than that. I can totally appreciate how it would drive women away.

      And the fact that you're standing around saying, "No, it's okay, I'm just joking" -- as (I'm assuming) a man, defining what a woman has a right to be offended by -- is a further demonstration of institutionalized sexism.

      I'm sure that guys telling crude jokes would welcome women. I doubt that the women would feel welcome, or be likely to come participate.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    29. Re:Read what you just wrote. by the_hoser · · Score: 1

      Well. We are talking about Debian here. These people have been seen frothing at the mouth in the wild. It doesn't surprise me.

    30. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Touche.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    31. Re:Read what you just wrote. by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Good marks for attempting to draw valid historical parallels. Please follow up by:
      a) calling Jerry Seinfeld and everyone else who has used "-nazi" in a humorously derogatory context (i.e., the famed "Soup Nazi") and explain how they're being insensitive.
      b) suggest an alternate term so that we can continue to differentiate "feminists" from the anti-male crusaders labeled "feminazis."

      The Nazis did horrible things, hoping to capitalize on fear. Rather than fear them, we laugh at them.

    32. Re:Read what you just wrote. by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      The Nazis were bigots of the highest order. They were willing to destroy their society, punish and demean entire demographics, lie to instill a false sense of superiority -- all in order to promote their perverse view of reality.

      The Nazis were about much more than mass murder. Parallels aren't that hard to come by.

      (Normal feminists improve the world. I thought I was extremely clear that I was referencing that "handful", that "vocal minority" which you speak of.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    33. Re:Read what you just wrote. by Demonspawn · · Score: 1

      "Man up, ladies!" is not exactly creating a welcoming environment.

      So the alternative is to say "Girl up, men!" and drive men away instead?

    34. Re:Read what you just wrote. by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      It really doesn't take much effort on the part of men to avoid the kind of behaviors that make women feel uncomfortable. Frankly, I wouldn't miss anybody who felt they'd been "driven out" by requests not to make jokes about women being porn stars or sex dispensers, or hitting on anything whose handle suggests she might have breasts, to name the most egregious offenders, but I suspect few men would feel the need to leave just from being asked to show basic respect. (Few grown-ups, anyway.)

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  57. Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

    Feminism is at is base a destructive doctrine. It fails to recognize that men and women are not the same. Equal - yes. Equivalent? No!

    I'm a 26-year-old male, and my wife and I have a 1-year-old. I'm a typical geek in a lot of ways, and my wife is an excellent graphic designer. She had an excellent job in the field before we had our daughter, but once she arrived, she didn't go back. We sat down before conceiving a child, and discussed our plans. We decided, together, that any children we might have would deserve and need the full attention of one of us.

    This decision does not mean that I am more capable of earning a living as a man, or that she is relegated to the role of housewife. What it does mean is that I, as a male, am more fulfilled provided for my family outside the home, while my wife is more fulfilled being present in the home to raise our children.

    I truly believe that racism and sexism are essentially dead with my generation. I can honestly say I've never discounted someone's ideas because they were a woman, or because they had a different skin color. Continuing to live as if entire groups of people are being subjugated is nothing but a recipe for unhappy people, seeing racism and sexism where there is none.

    --
    Learn about Photography Basics.
    1. Re:Feminism is destructive by nomadic · · Score: 1

      I truly believe that racism and sexism are essentially dead with my generation. I can honestly say I've never discounted someone's ideas because they were a woman, or because they had a different skin color.

      You may want to ask one of your black friends how their experiences compare.

    2. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I have none in flesh-and-blood, as I live in a very much predominately white area. That said, there about a dozen friends who are black from college that I have kept up with, and they fall into two camps:

      1) They believe that racism is a huge part of America, and seek active measures to advance themselves via legislation.

      2) They see that while individuals may have their own bias, racism holds no political or economic sway in today's world.

      I note that those in group 1 typically identify themselves as black before any other demographic. Those in group 2, including one guy I'm good friends with who was raised in Nigeria, see themselves as something unrelated to race - as a Republican or Democrat, as an American, or as a male.

      Even in the area where I live, which probably has the most entrenched racism and bigotry anywhere in the US, sexism is nothing more than a set of socially unacceptable jokes.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    3. Re:Feminism is destructive by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I can honestly say I've never discounted someone's ideas because they were a woman, or because they had a different skin color

      I think I can say the same, but I definitely can't make that claim on behalf of a large number of people in my age group. Prejudice is less common now than it used to be, in most of the western world, but to say it's essentially dead is quite untrue.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:Feminism is destructive by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Why? Do black people commonly discount people's idea because they are a women or have a different skin color?

      Did you just call black people sexist and racist?

      That sounds racist to me.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:Feminism is destructive by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      I truly believe that racism and sexism are essentially dead with my generation

      Because you would, of course, be the one who experiences the racism and the sexism and who'd know, right?

    6. Re:Feminism is destructive by mrsteele · · Score: 1

      You are more fulfilled providing for your family outside the home because that's who you are.

      Your wife is more fulfilled being present in the home to raise your children because that's who she is.

      It's certainly not because your a man and she's a woman. Plenty of women would prefer a job over staying home with the kids, and there are men out there that would like to stay home.

      You ideas are inherently sexist, and contribute to a system in which women are generally *expected* to stay home, and a man is *expected* earn the family's living. That makes your comment about sexism being dead especially hilarious.

      All people are equal, not all people are the same. Not all women are the same. Not all men are the same. That's one of the key points of the civil rights movement (including modern feminism): allowing people to make their own choices.

    7. Re:Feminism is destructive by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Feminism is at is base a destructive doctrine.

      Feminism is dead or more has run its course and finished. What remains now is simply sexism, true feminists accomplished their goals decades ago and this is indicated by women like your wife not only being able to get and hold a professional job but to excel at it. Opportunities to succeed are now equal but not all people are able or willing to actually work for it, this is where the female sexist comes in, much like their male counterpart they just want things their own way and think that attacking others is the way to get it and it is this that is inherently self destructive.

      I truly believe that racism and sexism are essentially dead with my generation.

      I wish I could say this but as long as people are attacking each other over their race in Cronulla we still have a problem.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    8. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I think you just passed over the basis of our disagreement and went straight to blame.

      You contest that gender roles are created and enforced by society. I say they are inherent in our genetics. You said that "it's certainly not because you're a man and she's a woman" - I disagree. That statement is not certain at all, its your preconceived notion.

      If you notice, nowhere did I say that I expected my wife to stay home, nor did I say that our arrangement is the best for everyone.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    9. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I realize that one's perception is one's reality, but that doesn't change everyone else's reality.

      Cries of sexism and racism, in my own personal experience, are used far more often as a weapon than as a means to gain equality.

      But I suppose that depends on your definition of "equality" - do you mean equal opportunity, or equal results? They are not the same thing, and trying to enforce the latter is immoral.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    10. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Would it help if I clarified it to this?:

      The impact of racism is essentially dead.

      It is now socially unacceptable, and therefore relegated to isolated communities of people. No longer is systemic racism or sexism an issue for my generation.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    11. Re:Feminism is destructive by mrsteele · · Score: 1

      Being equal in modern society means having the ability to choose one's own destiny without society placing unfair expectations on them. It's possible that there is a genetic component to temperament, but one of the things that modern research has shown us is that variation within groups (even sexes) is enormous. To simply say that 'women are usually happier at home taking care of the kids' reduces what we actually know down to a level where it's borderline incorrect. It also reinforces historical gender roles that limit people's choices.

      I think the mistake you (and many many others) are making is in trying to link decisions like this to sex at all. (I'm not talking about research here. I think research is valuable. I'm talking about how we interpret things in every day life) Why not just say that's how you two worked it out without referring to sex? I think that once you've linked those decisions to sex in your head, you're more likely to view other people's decisions through the same lens, and once enough of us do that, we end up restricting people's options, even unintentionally.

      We're all individuals, whether we're male or female, black or white, gay or straight. Sometimes many members of a group have a similar trait, but that doesn't mean all (or even a majority) of the people in the group are the same. It's an easy way to categorize in our head, but every time we think that a group acts in one way, we're treating people as a category and not an individual.

      Why can't we just take everybody as they are, and not try to explain their decisions as 'that's because they are a [group]'?

    12. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      "Why can't we just take everybody as they are, and not try to explain their decisions as 'that's because they are a [group]'?"

      Because that is how human being operate. We lump people into groups, whether based on sec, race, gender, hair color, manner of speech - anything. It is a survival mechanism.

      Stereotypes serve a purpose from an evolutionary standpoint - if you lived in England in the Dark Ages every person you ever met with red hair was a Norseman who wanted to rape, kill, and pillage, you're not going to have a very good opinion on red-heads, now are you?

      The examples aren't as harsh in modern life, but we all form stereotypes based on our own experiences.

      I don't understand why people think it is a bad think. I certainly don't fit the typical male stereotype in a lot of ways; my wife and I often joke that I am the "woman" of the relationship, because I am far more emotional than she is. Why can't we accept that someone is different without all this overhead of insisting that everyone be treated the same? If someone doesn't treat you how you'd like to be treated... stop hanging around them!

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    13. Re:Feminism is destructive by mrsteele · · Score: 1

      "Because that is how human being operate."

      Yes, we have gut level instincts. Evolved survival mechanisms. Immediate reactions.

      We also have the ability to reason and to control ourselves. Saying we shouldn't bother to try and change something is just lazy.

      If you accept that many people don't fit stereotypes, then stereotypes can only be a bad thing in our modern society, and we should make an effort to not use them.

      You suggest that people who don't fit stereotypes should just point out that they don't to others? (that's the only interpretation I can come up with for accepting someone is different while still not treating everyone the same) Isn't that just singling them out? That's one of the big points of treating people as individuals: so we *aren't* singling out the people that don't fit the stereotypes.

      We clearly just disagree, but I'm surprised to hear you espouse those beliefs after you admit that you don't meet the typical male stereotype. Have you never had your opinion dismissed because of the 'group' you belong to? "Oh, you just think that because your a guy." "Oh, you wouldn't get it because your a woman." Don't instances like that call on us to treat everyone the same?

    14. Re:Feminism is destructive by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, we disagree, and that's not a bad thing. At least we can be rational about it, which is rare.

      I guess it just doesn't bother me to be dismissed as much as it does some people. I feel like my ideas have merit, and if someone chooses not to listen to them, it has not harmed me in any way, and could potential cause problems for them.

      Stereotypes aren't rigid, they are mutable. They're a different class of attributes - anyone who is aware of the fact that they have stereotypes by definition doesn't let them overrule their judgment.

      I know that I have stereotypes based on gender, race, economic status, dress, language, and many other attributes. Those don't stop me from weighing everyone's input.

      It would probably help to know that I'm an Objectivist. All of these issues are solved by market forces, as someone who dismisses a portion of the knowledge base available to them will by extension be unable to compete in the market. I don't see the need for a concerted effort to prevent something that is already counterproductive, and any legislation to that effect is in fact damaging to the cause.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
  58. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Joe+Decker · · Score: 1

    "It just seems that now adays everything is completely overblown. I think that a huge majority of men in this country aren't sexist or racist, I think they just want to get to the end of the work day."

    That's a false dichotomy. Not all sexist (racist, homophobic, etc.) acts and comments are matters of premeditated intent.

    --Joe

  59. Bawww, Call the Waaambulance! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck feminism.

    Female chauvinism has been baked into Western society since the 1970's thanks to the feminist movement. Show me a humble and confident American woman who isn't profoundly sexually confused (i.e. transgendered), who isn't suffering from some kind of (probably invented) mental or emotional disorder, who doesn't think she's entitled to being treated like royalty, and I'll show you a time traveler. Women come in just three flavors now: spineless, crazy, and bitch. Choose wisely - the crazy ones usually make the most interesting company, by the way.

    The woman's equality movement lost all relevance and respectability when it decided that women need to be more equal than men. I grew up with these people, I was steeped in their chauvinist bullshit, and you know what? Feminists deserve all of the abuse that they get. You can't demand special treatment and equality in the same sentence, cunts. Stop making such a big deal over what set of genitals you were born with and acquire some desperately required emotional maturity, and maybe then adults will start taking you seriously.

  60. 1. there are cruel and cold misogynists by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    2. then there are absolutely clueless types who say stupid things out of complete ignorance of how to relate to or even just talk about the opposite sex

    3. and then there are the genuinely warped men with serious pscyhological issues and a serious axe to grind, with mother issues/ previous girlfriend issues/ stalker issues. these have to do with developmental psychology, emotional instability, and genuinely frightening deeper psychological issues like a need for control, and a perception of a threat in women on a psychological level they can't deal with

    but all such men are only a tiny minority of men. in public, in the workplace, in the FOSS community. unfortunately, they themselves by their words and actions generate the majority of heat on the subject

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  61. There seems to be confusion... by ph0rk · · Score: 1

    over the meanings of sexism and sexist.
    Given that FOSS is not a for-profit venture, there can be as much discrimination as the project leaders want. Don't like it? Write your own project.

    I hear my local bar has lots of sexist remarks spoken, too.

    --
    semantics are everything!
  62. Geek Hobbies? by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    Is there a higher percentage of women into RC racing, model rocketry, HAM radio or amateur astronomy? Most "geeky" chicks I know just read a lot & might play video games.

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  63. I call bogus by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    ... many women in the community ...

    I was reading the summary, trying to keep open minded, and you almost had me - until I saw this reference to "many women". MANY women? I've been to LUG meetings. You're lucky to see one woman.

    Note by LUG I mean Linux Users Group, not Lesbians Until Graduation - meetings of the latter would likely attract more women than I've observed in the former.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  64. Past time for change by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately it seems that FOSS junkies did little better than the rest of the world with respect to sexism

    I think it's fair to say they've done a fair bit worse. Most IT shops are Porky's without the good manners.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  65. Mod parent up... by aztracker1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I get really sick of subversive PC behavior... Life isn't fair, and nobody should have to be coddled in an open community. I have yet to see any woman, or man be treated differently in this industry in terms of skill. If anything women seem to be given more slack, without any merit.

    --
    Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    1. Re:Mod parent up... by David+Gerard · · Score: 5, Funny

      “It’s a free market world,” said Ubuntu Linux developer Hiram Nerdboy. “It’s about competence and getting the job done. Working sixteen hours a day on a project you really love is par for the course. That we’re all eighteen to twenty-five is from the accelerated Internet-based learning of the new generation, not exploitation of young workers who don’t know any better.”

      Over a third of women in IT had complained of sexism up to sexual harassment at work. “It’s women who just don’t have social skills,” said Nerdboy. “They object to the guys freely choosing to all go down the strip club after work. They’re just not team players.”

      Open source projects have worse figures than industry, with male to female ratios approaching fifty-to-one. Many women cite gross sexism on mailing lists and IRC. “In my experience, women just don’t have a working sense of humour and can’t take a joke. My girlfriend thought it was funny! Even leaving helpful comments on their blogs didn’t work. ‘Political correctness’ is no exaggeration. Anyway, I met my girlfriend online!”

      “...,” said his girlfriend, RealDoll Ada.

      “And it’s not like you can get the applicants,” added Nerdboy. “We can hardly get any girls to apply for a job here. They’re obviously naturally not good enough geeks. It must be evolutionary. We need more pink computers.”

      “This is of course a terrible, terrible state of affairs,” said a spokesman for the Confederation of British Industry. “In the meantime, we need lots more IT workers shipped in from overseas.” He was later heard muttering something about “divide and conquer” and sniggering.

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    2. Re:Mod parent up... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "That we’re all eighteen to twenty-five is from the accelerated Internet-based learning of the new generation.."

      Stop, Stop. You almost made do a spit-take.

    3. Re:Mod parent up... by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see any woman, or man be treated differently in this industry in terms of skill.

      I've seen a little bit, but it got stomped on rather quickly by the project leaders. Then of course there was the rails/couchdb/etc mess, which afaict seems to have resulted in the broader community stomping on that smaller community and its leaders.

    4. Re:Mod parent up... by superdana · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have yet to see any woman, or man be treated differently in this industry

      Of course you haven't seen it. That's the point. Just because you personally haven't seen it--or, probably more accurately, didn't notice it--doesn't mean it's not there. But you think that just because you haven't seen something, it doesn't exist. That's the problem.

    5. Re:Mod parent up... by lgw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sorry, I'm an engineer, I'm skeptical about what I've seen first hand, and outright disbelieve in all other claims.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:Mod parent up... by roguetrick · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To quote from his original article "women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development." If that doesn't point to some systematic problem I don't know what does. The point of declaring the existence of the problem is to figure out where it lies. Could be nerds asking female devs out on dates all the time, could be harassment. Regardless, SOMETHING is preventing female devs from moving into the FOSS community. You might say its because the industry itself has an overinflated amount of female devs due to so called coddling. I doubt that, and suspect its due to group norms and institutional sexism.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    7. Re:Mod parent up... by DrLang21 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or maybe women are too smart to work for free.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    8. Re:Mod parent up... by quanticle · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If I haven't seen it, and no around me has seen it, isn't the onus on you to give some more proof other than, "Really, guys! Sexism in OSS is real!" I mean, to say you have to show some causal relationship between OSS "culture" (however you measure it) and sexism. Simply saying that the number of women who work on open source projects is less than the number of women working on proprietary projects isn't enough, for that is correlation, not causation.

      You hear the same sort of rhetoric about other group/profession combinations. The other day, I was hearing a person rant about how men were underrepresented in nursing. When did it become mandatory for every profession to have perfect gender balance?

      Perhaps women just don't like spending hours and hours of their free time on a project for little monetary gain. In other words, perhaps they aren't as likely to be chumps compared to men. :)

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    9. Re:Mod parent up... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      I said in a previous post, its certainly possible that this is boiled down to the difference in outlook between men and women, but I really doubt it. It could however result from society at large. I wouldn't dismiss that women are less likely to take up work like hobbies because already they're forced to choose between "family and career."

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    10. Re:Mod parent up... by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Ummm.

      There is an 'elephant in the room' phenomena -

      but, if two people are in a room, and one of them says there is an elephant, the other swears the see nothing, and the camera you put into the room never shows an elephant, the scale under the floor only measures the weight of two people, and the microphones only recorded the sound of two of them breathing

      even though one person saw and reacted to an elephant, still doesn't mean there was an elephant.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    11. Re:Mod parent up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Having watched a lot of sci-fi, I wouldn't rule out the existence of the elephant so quickly.

      The elephant could be out of phase for example, or out of sync with normal time. Aliens could have hidden the elephant for all manner of reasons.

    12. Re:Mod parent up... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      Ex-FUCKING-actly!

      I went to read the article in which the author claims there's sexism in OSS, and his claims are laughable. He's crying "sexism" because there are less women. However, sexism is not less-than-equal distribution of the sexes, it is discrimination against one of the sexes arbitrarily. Has this moron ever considered that maybe, just maybe, women don't happen to be interested in coding? Some are, and they do that... but if others aren't interested, it doesn't mean sexism at all.

      Furthermore, he's talking about development that tends to happen on the fucking internet. You know, where your gender is conveniently masked unless you choose to reveal it. How, exactly, are these theoretical sexists going to discriminate against women when they can't even know which coders are men and which are women??

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    13. Re:Mod parent up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If that doesn't point to some systematic problem I don't know what does.
      This points to a problem, there is anecdotal evidence of sexism. The assumption: sexism is the problem.
      If it were, there would be a number of women who try meddling with OSS and get scared away because of sexism.
      The number should be 17x the current percentage of geek women. Quite big to pass under the radar.
      Of course this under the other assumption: female % in OSS ought to match % in career.
      "I code for money or career" is one thing. "I code for personal pleasure or to boost my ego" is another.

      Some anecdotal evidence of my own. I have - unfortunately - some experience of places where women are 1/10th of men. They get treated well exactly because there are few of them.

    14. Re:Mod parent up... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      For the time being, I doubt we will have much more than anecdotal evidence. Who is going to submit a peer reviewed study based on a properly conducted survey for the F/OSS community?

      With the lack of that, we have to fall back on what we see happening in other industries and situations. My experience goes about as far as community college classes on sociology and group theory. I wouldn't trust what I say as far as you could throw me. And I'm 6'6" and over 300 pounds, so that ain't going to be far.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    15. Re:Mod parent up... by CherniyVolk · · Score: 1

      Of course you haven't seen it. That's the point. Just because you personally haven't seen it--or, probably more accurately, didn't notice it--doesn't mean it's not there. But you think that just because you haven't seen something, it doesn't exist. That's the problem.

      Oh this is crap. This sort of fabrication is the grounds for all the anti-racism propaganda and lies of the last 40 years.

      First you seem supportive, in a condescending way that he hasn't seen sexism/racism/communism. Then you assume the person didn't "notice" sexism/racism/communism, as though they might not be aware of blatant examples. With this assumption, you attempt to shoot down his honest assertion that he hasn't witnessed any blatant sexism/racism/communism. After distracting the readers away from his factual and honest observation, and leave question to fantasy world of idiots you present by questioning his observations, you present your own agenda as reality and propose that sexism/racism/communism actually exists and one problem is that no one happens to see it.

      We aren't dealing with microscopic issues here. If I wave my hand across the desk in front of me, looking for my pen, and I neither see it, smell it, touch it or hear it. IT'S NOT THERE! Perhaps it's in the drawer, but the pen, is not there where I directed my senses. But in the mind games played in sociology, we can convince a person that sexism/racism/communism pens are sitting there on the desk and the fact we didn't hear them, see them or come in contact with them while trying to look for them some how justifies claiming the pens are bigger than ever! It's an inverse rationale of homeopathy!

      You're only tactic, is trying to put into question a persons ability to understand their own senses. While some things might be grey-area, it's only the blatant samples that are the active ingredients--meaning, the subtle episodes rarely sum to be a significant factor. Take rape for instance, a real rape victim, is a rape victim anywhere in the world looked at by any other person of any other culture. The slutty girl, wobbling about random bars hanging all over guys grabbing their privates with her breasts hanging out only to get worried about the one she finally woke up with.... well, not everyone thinks that's rape; I mean if we really want to put the cards face up on the table, tell me why it's my fault if I drink a beer and get into a car, but somehow it's somebody elses fault, regardless of their soberness, if I drink a beer and spread my legs?

      Basically, if the man said he hasn't witnessed sexism/racism/communism... I think that more outlines the fact you have a personal agenda rather than a real life claim. Maybe it's not his apparently askewed and flawed perception of the world, all those girls he has seen weren't smiling or laughing... maybe he's psychotic and forgot to take medicine? Yeah, what he saw wasn't what happened.

      This is an easy way out of having to rationalize, prove or otherwise demonstrate your claims. Maybe you are just making this all up, we all would like to change the world; some of us are willing to do or say anything to do it.

    16. Re:Mod parent up... by JLF65 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't laugh - it's the truth! Schools have NEVER been a place of learning. They're nothing more than over-paid babysitters and have been for decades. I learned more on my own in the library and bookstores than I EVER got in school. These days, I don't even have to go to a library or bookstore as I can find even better material online. I only WISH we had had the net when I was in school.

    17. Re:Mod parent up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've noticed far lower numbers of Indian developers in FOSS than in proprietary development... we must all be racist too then.

    18. Re:Mod parent up... by mackyrae · · Score: 4, Interesting

      By "gender is masked" you mean "gender is assumed male until you choose to admit you're a freak," right? Because that's how it really is, from a woman's perspective. We're not assumed gender-neutral. If we were, everybody'd say "they" or "ze" instead of referring to every developer as "he" or "dude" or "guy" without proof that the person in question actually identifies as a man. No, we are definitely assumed to be men if we don't...well, basically, if we don't come out of the closet about being women.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    19. Re:Mod parent up... by fj3k · · Score: 1

      Ah, but if you're using sci-fi to allow your elephant to exist, then technically your elephant is sci-fi. And part of being science fiction is being fiction. Therefore your elephant still doesn't exist! Reality sucks sometimes.

      --
      Two men claimed to have walked into a bar. Only one had the bruises to prove it.
    20. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      I get really sick of subversive PC behavior...

      Get a Mac?

      (Wow, it felt weird saying that!)

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    21. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for my gender as whole (unlike you, apparently) but I tend to assume people on technical web sites are male until proven otherwise because there's high odds that they are. If I'm corrected then I will switch to using female pronouns. If I signed up on, say, a scrapbooking forum with a gender-ambiguous handle I would naturally expect to be assumed female. Same thing here.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    22. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Only until you reverse the polarity of the elephant and you have a Reverse Polish Elephant. They're real, I've seen them after too many scotch-and-cokes.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    23. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Exactly! Or maybe women are just wired differently to men and don't get enough kicks out of building stuff. Of course I have nothing to base this on except the entire course of human history.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    24. Re:Mod parent up... by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Note: "a woman's" not "all women's" ;-)

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    25. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      It still sounds to me like you're talking for all women with the indefinite article-ness and the 'we' and soforth, but fair point. :) Anyway, I guess what I was saying was that assumption of gender based on domain isn't sexist in and of itself unless you inherently consider one sex to be better than the other. It's just a sensible default.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    26. Re:Mod parent up... by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Ah ok sorry

      It's irritating, though, to have to correct it all the time. And I think it contributes to the invisibility problem. If I don't correct it when I'm called "he" I feel like there *might* be some other woman in the IRC channel and she'll miss out on "ah! I'm not alone! Yay!" Instead it reinforces the notion that there are rather literally no women. I mean, if we all kept our mouth shut... Make sense? I gotta say, my first LUG meeting would've been much more uncomfortable without the one other woman. I'm commonly the only one now, but everyone there knows me so meh. I'm not an outsider anymore. Hopefully the next time a new woman shows up, it's for a meeting I've decided to attend, so she's not alone.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    27. Re:Mod parent up... by Nursie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wouldn't like to guess at the motivations and drives in play here, BUT-

      I work in a team that is roughly one third female. Of the guys I know well enough to know what they do after hours, most of them go home and play with computers, whether it's gaming, tinkering with linux, web design, FOSS components, private projects, whatever. Of the women I know to the same extent none of them do that.

      The team is made up of very competent Software Engineers.

      I really think that the skew in FOSS contributors is not that surprising. Yes, I know, anecdotes and data, but it's my experience. If women genuinely feel that they are suffering from sexist attitudes or behaviour then sure, it needs to be looked at and stamped out. But taking the raw gender imbalance as evidence is just crap.

      It's like the studies that the UK government put out on the gender pay gap. Look a little closer and you'll find they compare female part-time workers to male full-time workers and don't take into account the difference in hours worked. Bullshit.

    28. Re:Mod parent up... by Upphew · · Score: 1

      Polar elephant?!? That sounds like some kind of Canadian plot...

    29. Re:Mod parent up... by rdwulfe · · Score: 1

      I find this interesting about humans. Why do we have to have someone else in the room that's JUST like us? Same race, same gender, to feel comfortable with ourselves and that group? Why do people get upset when they're the unique one? Are we that indoctrinated into group think that we cannot operate without anxiety when we're the only white person, black person, Hispanic, male, female, or whatever in a room full of a different race, (species? :D) or gender? Rion Wulfe

    30. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you got an upped score on this one.

      In school, I learned how to debate the lessons of teachers. I'd ask them how they came to this conclusion as the finite answer, and where they gathered their information from. Instead of the knowledgeable (IMHO) "we don't have all of the answers yet, but this is the most agreed-upon and chosen point of truth," I would get "GET OUT OF MY CLASSROOM. GO TO THE OFFICE!"

      *gasp*

      "But, but, but... I was thinking about it and there's a missing aspect o..."

      "GEETTTT OOOOUUTTTT!!!!!"

      Podium is yours. ;)

    31. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Has this moron ever considered that maybe, just maybe, women don't happen to be interested in coding?

      Moron aside, you make a keen observation. If I recall, the last time I actually went on boards looking for technical information and code snippets, I saw VERY few women. The ones that did exist had men going ga-ga for them. Like the real workplace.

      "I met a woman today. She's an experienced coder and is part of our team now. I can't think straight. I lost track of what I was saying.. Sorry.. Where was I?"

    32. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      No, we are definitely assumed to be men if we don't...well, basically, if we don't come out of the closet about being women.

      Heh.. Yeah. Last time I checked, most people intuitively consider nurses to be female (less than in the past, but still do). They consider firemen to be men, until you see the woman pullin' that uniform up on-scene. You consider the garbage men to be men, until you see a woman.

      On and on ad nauseum. In the end, in how many places do we see someone of the unexpected gender and do a double-take with "What are you doing here?"

      Last time I did that was.... Oh, wait. I never did that. I must be a weirdo. ;)

    33. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Oh, I should mention before I move on... I get the observational assumption that I'm a gay male based on my username. poofmeisterp.

      Let me sing you a song to remind you of the past and where my first-reaction username may have come from.... *ahem*

      "I love CheesyPoofs, you love CheesyPoofs; if we didn' love CheesyPoofs.. weeee'd beeeeee.. laaaaaaaaaaaaame. Like Night Court fifth season laaaaaaaaame! Yahh."

      But that makes me gay. Mmmhmm. Indeedily-doo.

    34. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's trying to woo the woman who pointed it out to him and suggested he should write an article.

      That's the best way to get in bed with a woman. Show her all of the wonderful things you agree with her on. ...until that day comes when you both start letting the truth about yourselves out.

      This is totally smartass, of course. I'm sure you get the point being made. *ahem* Idea.

    35. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      With the lack of that, we have to fall back on what we see happening in other industries and situations.

      Oh, that is such short-sighted crud.

      Another thing that causes problems in the Human mindset is the lack of deep analysis of situations in order to save time. If you don't have the time to think about it, I don't think you have much useful support to give it.

      I'm *NOT* saying you're wrong, and I'm *NOT* saying you're right. Think or do like most of the seeking-only-happiness people do and move on at hyper-ADD speed to something else. This is way too deep.

      You got my attention, though, so good job!!! :D

    36. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Your wit keeps me reading. ;)

    37. Re:Mod parent up... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Well, certainly the net has made plagiarism more convenient. As I recall, the problem students had in school wasn't a lack of information but a lack of study.

    38. Re:Mod parent up... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      This talk always reminds me og grade school when the shop teacher (yes shop, go figure) did his sexism class. He handed out papers with a number of professions on it, and asked us all to rate each one as a male or female job.

      I was accused of "goofing off" and "not taking it seriously" because of my answers. Go figure that the kid whose mother was the college educated professional and father was a night worker who was unable to be there a lot except on weekends wouldn't have the exact same prejudices as everyone else.

      That always seems to be the problem though.... the law of fives is never wrong!

      That is, if you set out to look for something, evidence of it will bubble to the surface wherever you look.

      Consider this exchange
      "You sir, are an addict"
      "I am not"
      "See! Denial! You are totally an addict, addicts often deny being addicts"

      I can start out now with the idea that women find me attractive. Then as I go throughout my day, mark in my head every time that I see a woman that I don't already know well looks at me and smiles. Then later on I can say "hey man, women find me attractive, 6 girls checked me out today".

      Is that valid evidence? I mean, the look and smile could mean they find me attractive. So it is evidence that they might. However, it ignores all the women who didn't look at me, or I didn't see look at me. It ignores all the other reasons they might be smiling. It might even be evidence I have dirt on my nose that amuses people.

      In the end, we have to rememeber that correlation is not causation. Why are there very few females in FOSS? I don't know at all. I don't claim to know. That is the bigger issue. The author talks about being attacked, I remain unconvinced.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    39. Re:Mod parent up... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      It can look like that but um....

      It was school that did everything from teach me some history and introduce me to philosophy, to geometry, algebra, and some calculous. I mean, my parents were helpful with times tables and all sorts of things, but, unter their tutelage, I doubt i would have made it to college level calculus without some serious remedial work.

      not a dig at the rents, just, 6 or so hours a day 180 or so day a year... its a lot of time.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    40. Re:Mod parent up... by cecille · · Score: 1

      You make a very good point. Some of this may just be different wiring, some of it is also likely social norms. Women in general still tend to take a larger roll in housework etc. - maybe it's just a time issue (although this is becoming less of the norm - http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/060719/dq060719b-eng.htm). In other words, maybe the fact that there are fewer women in FOSS development than men isn't necessarily evidence of greater sexism in the FOSS community and it's more a reflection of a different, external gender difference.

      Could also be a remnant of old-school development teams too - when your entire team has been together since the start, it probably doesn't have too many females on it. There have been a couple of times I've wanted to submit some kernel patches (fairly minor stuff - I do driver development as part of my job so sometimes I see something here or there that could use a fix). I never have though, 'cause I know it won't get accepted. Not because I'm female necessarily - more because my name isn't morton or torvalds =).

      --
      ...no two people are not on fire.
    41. Re:Mod parent up... by fugue · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What matters isn't whether you can come up with a quantitative measure for whether there is sexism. What matters is whether women have a hard time in an environment due to their own observations.

      Forget placing blame. That's only really important if you're trying to punish someone.

      Rather, look for a solution. I have found that it is not really that difficult to listen to complaints and problems and to try to be sensitive to perceived issues without compromising my honour.

      You can think of this as risk management. There might be sexism that you can't see. If there isn't and you don't act, then no problem. If there isn't and you do act, again, the actions required are pretty insignificant and will probably make you a better person anyway, but certainly nobody loses much. If there is and you do act, everyone wins big! If there is and you don't act, then the consequences are truly too horrible to comprehend (like: you'll have to date women who just don't appreciate love poems written in perl. Or, if you're feeling empathic today, a lot of women made miserable by feeling unwelcome when they seek a community of fellow geeks). So, given observation noise, what's the most sensible course of action?

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    42. Re:Mod parent up... by be951 · · Score: 1

      To quote from his original article "women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development." If that doesn't point to some systematic problem I don't know what does.

      It does if you're comparing apples to apples. On the other hand, isn't FOSS development fundamentally different from proprietary development in many ways? I'd also like to know what "participation" means. Does it include sales? Marketing? Focus groups? project management? Certainly there are FOSS projects that have all those elements and proprietary shops that don't, but my anecdotal experience leads me to believe that those things tend to be thin for FOSS and are often well funded in companies making proprietary software.

      I'm not saying there is no sexism, but the evidence offered seems rather thin -- some vague numbers and a couple of anecdotes. If this is a real problem, make a better case than that.

    43. Re:Mod parent up... by Eivind+Eklund · · Score: 1

      Could be treating it more as a job and less as a hobby. I personally suspect that the difference is inherent in the kind of personality men and women have, but I'd be very happy to be proved wrong :)

      --
      Doubting the existence of evolution is like doubting the existence of China: It just shows that you're uninformed.
    44. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      ...so if information is information, it's remembered, right? Memory?

      If the issue isn't lack of information, but lack of study, what is study? Examination of a certain amount of information, and not grabbing all of it? I don't see how it's possible to study *everything in the world* in school.

      That being said, what does study produce as output? I'm seeing something like..... hmm... *thinks* examination of information =~ discovering underlying concepts and patterns. So, using underlying concepts and patterns like "how to do multiplication" or "how to understand what the dinosaurs looked like" is.. hmm.. useful, BUT, if you don't use it in your life, what is the use?

      Now lemme think again *strains with face turning red* understanding HOW things work and storing information with a past modeling concept in mind, along with taking a look at current subjects with those models applied, and let me mention "with near 100% accuracy and repetition of past events and models," I conjecture a person who has more useful ability than the storage of the information from school.

      Now let me decide who I should be that's of more use... Do I want to be the person who learned what they were taught in school, by the reading materials and examinations of rote that were chosen by that school district and/or their teaching staff?
      Do I want to be someone that can understand the underlying concepts of things, events, and procedural outcomes, so that I may intelligently learn how to learn things of use, filter out garbage, and understand the outcome of situations before wasting people and/or time attempting them?

      I'll choose the latter.

    45. Re:Mod parent up... by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Simple, we're pack animals. And like any other pack animal, when we don't have at least one other person in our current 'pack', we feel very uncomfortable.

      @ mackyrae - yeah, I can see it getting annoying. :/ We need a gender-neutral pronoun so we can stop weirding grammar by twisting 'them' and 'they' to be third person singular.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    46. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Damn visual-spatial curse. ;)

    47. Re:Mod parent up... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Damnit.

      I hate these models because there's a clear design flaw. Here's my experience in the short, short, short version:

      Women appear in the IT team where I worked. They wanted to move ahead/up in the company, but they remained quiet because they didn't want to start fights and get in trouble or fired.

      Years pass.

      Finally, a new woman that started at the company was appalled by the horrible repression that all of the existing women were punished with (let's not bring into this the fact that men that kept quiet also had the same experience).

      On a daily basis, said woman got next to no work done and spent time creating dramatic situations in the department between women/women, women/men, and men/men.

      This woman threatens to sue and uses her college degree as an indication that she is superior to all of the individuals on the WebApp team.

      Almost immediately, she is placed in the leadership position on the other team - WebApp. She takes two women from our team, by trading two men from that team to our storage team.

      The new men on our team didn't understand the issues we were dealing with and didn't have solid backgrounds in storage management; that's needed. The women that were "promoted openly" to the other team with the new female superiority-based team leader had no idea what they were working on because they had no experience with Java WebApp development.

      Oh, my. Sister Superior on the WebApp team had NO EXPERIENCE in WebApp design *OR* Java! Wow. This is getting good.

      The two women that were pulled to the other team asked for their positions on our team back after a few weeks, and the two men asked for the positions on their old team back.

      The exchange occurs. Tension is growing in the back of everyone's minds.

      Work goes on and the day-to-day tasks are accomplished with no unusual hiccups; things are "back to normal" on our team.

      One day, we find out that the woman on the other team (Superiority captain) is terminated because she made threatening statements to the men on her team because they were "working too quickly and not documenting everything they were doing." When I say threatening, I mean physically threatening. Oh yeah.

      She disappears and is never heard from again.

      One of the women on our team is asked to fill in on the other team, as she had a few weeks of experience. She turned the offer down. The other woman was offered the position, and SHE QUIT.

      The quitting woman loudly expressed her discontent that the company was choosing her simply because she was a woman. The company denied and responded with a higher-paid offer in the SAME POSITION. They made it clear to her (which she shared with all of us) that she was chosen only because of her previous experience on that team. Mmmhmm. One where she didn't know a thing and didn't do anything.

      She took the position.

      A few weeks later, a person was hired on to our team that had absolutely no experience in storage management. A guy.

      Then, the woman who moved to the other team leadership position quit her job and told a few of us that she got a top-level management position at a company. Guess what she was a manager of? Device automation; she had no experience with it and had no idea what she was doing. She laughed that she is making 3 times the pay from our company, though. We all laughed with her.

      The guy who was hired on to our team who had previous experience in Java WebApp development -AND- team leadership asked to be considered for the team leadership position on the other team.

      He was approved and switched right over there. Congratulations, boss! Oh, wait, he had no idea how WebApps work. And didn't know Java. HE LIED ON HIS RESUME!

      Another nice guy who worked on our team showed a couple of us something nice... He shows us his resume; he had over 10 years of management experience and 5 years of Java Web Application development experience.

      He shows us something else: a letter he wrote back after M

  66. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by nschubach · · Score: 1

    I've said it before. People like (crave) drama. Check out what's popular on TV and you can see that. You'll find "reality TV" that's so overblown that it's not even like reality. Before that was Springer and all the other talk shows. Celebrity goofs, overdoses, Police and Professors reactions, etc. People want something to talk about the next day and drama seems to fill that void easily. In fact, I have a friend that texts me every time he sees an accident or is in a crazy driver situation. Then wants to make a big deal about it when we meet up for game weekends.

    Sometimes I wish people would just mind their own business and move on.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  67. Arise ye inmates of codings prison by vorlich · · Score: 1

    It was almost a cliche in the socialist movement in the UK in the early eighties for some of the most unreconstructed men to champion women's rights while living a private life that was not quite as pure as the driven snow with regard to women.
    Since I don't know the author, I can't comment on that aspect of his life. However, he is guilty of grandstanding on the issues of group he is not actually part of. Laudable as this may be, I would suggest that in order to clarify the issue, the victims should come forward and bear witness.
    You don't really see a great number of women down the pub knocking back 16 pints of lager every Friday night commenting on how Chelsea are doing and whether or not money will buy a team success but is that an example of sex based exclusion or is it because they have better things to do?

    --
    Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
  68. Stand up for equality! by ChienAndalu · · Score: 4, Funny

    echo "alias woman=man" >> ~/.bashrc

    1. Re:Stand up for equality! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (posting AC because I've modded elsewhere in this topic) No no no no no...


      Doing that breaks your ability to see woman pages.

      They're like man pages, except they don't tell you anything useful - you're just supposed to know, and if you don't it's because there's something wrong with you.

      Oh, and one week in four, they just shout at you.

    2. Re:Stand up for equality! by selven · · Score: 1

      Don't use the terminal, it's sexist. I have proof.

      #man women
      No manual entry for women

    3. Re:Stand up for equality! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Making woman merely an alias? That's not real equality. Better make a hard link from man to woman.

      Shit. That wasn't what I intended to say.

  69. Where you there? by khasim · · Score: 1

    (as happened in a talk @ GoCaRuCo)

    Nice try, you've failed statistics.

    And the odds are that you were not even at that presentation.

    Imagine that rather than having a naked chick every so many slides (as happened in a talk @ GoCaRuCo), you would have a picture of a negroid in chains animation pulling in the next slide of the presentation. Add a whip to the scene and it would make even a mostly white audience severely uncomfortable.

    That would indicate that the person giving that presentation could be racist (or very stupid).

    And that SINGLE even has already been reference MULTIPLE times in this discussion.

    Meanwhile, go and read the LKML to see thousands of comments without any sexism at all.

    Then learn statistics.

    Then you'll understand where the REAL sexism is. You might want a mirror.

    1. Re:Where you there? by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      Lets' repeat ObsessiveMathsFreak answer again. If I don't shoot you a thousand times, and then shoot you, there is no problem?

    2. Re:Where you there? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Yes, because it's obvious: if the number of non-sexist posts outnumber the sexist ones, then sexism must not exist!

      The problem here is in thinking that because there's only a few bad apples that everything is fine and business as usual should be maintained. That one talk was followed up by lots and lots of vigorous denials that anything was wrong, which did far more to tell women to stay away from that community than the original talk ever could.

    3. Re:Where you there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If 1000 people don't shoot you, and then one person does shoot you. Is the problem with the community? Or with the one shooter?

  70. FOSS sexism is laughable concept by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

    FOSS is done primarily by male geeks in their early 20s; guys who all too often will graduate college as frustrated virgins.

    What makes anybody think they would be opposed to the inclusion of *more* women into their lives? Perhaps in large part for self-serving reasons, but so what? The same is true of any other area of society.

    I, for one, would have loved to have more girls in my CS courses (2 of which had no girls at all), for the chance to meet them...

  71. Absurd by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

    So the proof of Sexism is that when an absurd claim of it is made, the accuser is met with a negative response?

    This is a new low for /. How do I configure my account to no longer show me any stories edited by ScuttleMonkey ?

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  72. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  73. Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 1

    It shouldn't be surprising that there is sexism of one sort or another in FOSS development. It's everywhere, and at all levels of Western society.

    Sexism is so pervasive that we have a hard time recognizing all but the most obvious forms. And yet most of us recognize that it is an undesirable human quality, like bigotry or religious fundamentalism. So when we are called on sexist behavior, our first reaction is to get massively defensive and deny the problem. We're not sexist! We think sexism is evil! Some of my best friends are women!

    Uh-huh. The problem is, the person calling you on your sexism ISN'T making it up. From her point of view, denying it just means you're as clueless as all the other men.

    Guys, it doesn't matter whether your intentions are good. Sometimes you will say or do something sexist. You probably didn't mean too, you'll probably be really embarrassed to find out, but that doesn't change anything. The best thing to do is acknowledge, apologize, and try to accept that what you said or did was sexist. Even if you don't know why. Even if you think it wasn't.

    Denying that what you did was sexist is the same thing as saying that what you did was fair because you played by the rules. It's not fair if the rules aren't fair. And the rules, in our society, aren't fair to women. Until we invent some new rules, you're going to have to cope with on-the-fly correction.

    DON'T TAKE IT PERSONALLY. Apologize and think and try to do better next time.

    1. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Part of the problem is that sexism covers such a wide range of behavior, and certain people try to push that range even wider as it suits their purpose (because, as you say, MOST people are instinctively against sexism).

      If some big open source project put on their homepage, "Women are not encouraged to contribute because it's a waste of our time, we reject 95% of their code because it's really bad" etc then pretty much everyone would agree that it's sexist and bad.

      But on the other end of the spectrum, when a developer says "I wish I could easily explain what I do to girls I meet at bars", not many people immediately identify that as sexist. I don't. As far as I know, most girls aren't offended by that either. But you have these irritating people who get all up in arms about silly statements like that and EQUATE them with all the other legitimately bad sexist behavior that can happen.

      It's self-serving and dishonest and, if the person is genuinely serious about it, simply a sign that they are out of touch with reality and obsessed with trivial matters. Perhaps they are victims of more serious sexism and are hypersensitive. These are not the kinds of people we should be listening to.

    2. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      But what you consider hypersensitivity might be considered by others as simply awareness.

      You don't think the remark "I wish I could easily explain what I do to girls I meet at bars" is a big deal, so if someone calls it a sexist remark, they seem hypersensitive, right?

      But maybe they are just naturally sensitive to remarks which they identify as sexist. See something, say something. They might be wrong, they might be right; the larger issue is that as a man you have no *inherent* frame of reference by which to decide whether they are right or wrong or how serious or trivial it is.

      If all men were color blind, we would think women were being hypersensitive about the difference between red and green. It just wouldn't matter to us, and we'd wonder why they kept making a fuss about it.

    3. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      But all men and women are human, and sexism cuts well both ways. I'd think (given the stereotypes, at least) that those posting on slashdot would appreciate the difficulties of not meeting one's gender requirements.

      Is it "sexist" to expect a man to be competitive? To mock him for being sensitive, or crying, or needing his wife to handle stressful times for him? What about not wanting to play sports, or not being particularly successful at sex or good looking? What happens to a boy who likes sewing and painting and dancing or intellectual pursuits instead of football? Is it therefore impossible for women to understand the horrible sexism men face?

      Our culture raises men and women to different goals - women only have a worse start if you are judging them against "manly" goals, which is, somewhat ironically, what most feminists do. A woman today has her own choice of which traditional role she wants to fill - a man does not. For every strong, independent, competent woman I know, I know two who would be laughed out of their social circles as a wimp and a failure were they actually held to the standards a man is.

    4. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by stdarg · · Score: 1

      But what you consider hypersensitivity might be considered by others as simply awareness.

      You're right, but that's what I was trying to illustrate. There is a spectrum of what is accepted as sexism, and I'm on the part of the spectrum that does not accept that statement as sexist. To me, it has to be more serious, more hurtful, intentional, maybe having real-life effects (discrimination). Then it is definitely sexist. But I give the benefit of the doubt in lesser instances.

      I'm sure you would agree that we can't base rules on the *most* sensitive people, simply because it's not possible to please the person most sensitive to anti-male sexism and the person most sensitive to anti-female sexism at the same time (those people tend to be offended just by the existence of the other).

      the larger issue is that as a man you have no *inherent* frame of reference by which to decide whether they are right or wrong or how serious or trivial it is.

      That's true but I see that as an advantage. In criminal trials, why do we get juries of our peers rather than specifically juries of the victim's peers? (I'm assuming you live in the US.) Simply it's because intent matters.

      In this case -- men are better able to judge another man's intent as to whether a statement is genuinely hurtful/sexist or merely an attempt to be funny or maybe just a mistake. Women are certainly better able to judge whether the statement was hurtful or not, but that doesn't really matter to me. (Honestly.) What's good for the goose and all that -- if someone offends me with a statement, and I find out that it was truly unintentional, then it's hard to stay offended/angry. I may still be sad or whatever, but I would stop accusing the person of being an asshole. This has happened to me once or twice so I'm not just bullshitting.

    5. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      the larger issue is that as a man you have no *inherent* frame of reference by which to decide whether they are right or wrong or how serious or trivial it is.

      This is exactly the issue - namely that the criterion you're using is that if some woman somewhere dislikes something a man says, and calls "sexism", that makes the man sexist and there is no way for him to rebut the claim. I call bullshit. Adopting that line of thinking creates a race to the bottom in which any easily-offended person gets to define anything that bothers them as socially unacceptable speech. It's nonsense and an insult to those who care about REAL sexism.

      Claims of sexism need to be based upon societally-agreed upon criteria. Statements denigrating women? Sure. Treating a woman as an object? Sure. Merely offending somebody? No way.

      We need to have some sense and understanding for each other, men and women alike. If some guy says he has a hard time explaining his work to prospective dates, let's have some sympathy for the dude. If a woman talks about how it's hard to get guys to understand what she tells them, let's have some sympathy for her. Let's not label them sexist because somebody might concoct an offensive explanation of their words.

    6. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      Sexism is like racism: it's based on a power relationship. It only flows one way, in the direction of power.

      For example, a woman denying a job to a man is not being sexist. Arbitrary, yes, probably unfair, possibly vindictive. But NOT sexist, unless we are talking about a job which is routinely and historically denied to men by women.

      You are making perfectly valid points about the pressures that society puts on men to be macho and assume certain roles because of their gender. But you can't call that sexism, because that would imply that women were in charge, and making the rules.

    7. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      From her point of view, denying it just means you're as clueless as all the other men.

      Guys, it doesn't matter whether your intentions are good. Sometimes you will say or do something sexist

      Pot meet kettle.

      Males do not have a lock on sexism, ya freakin sexist!

      Apologize and think and try to do better next time.

      Please, lead by example.

    8. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by Cederic · · Score: 1

      And the rules, in our society, aren't fair to women.

      So that's why women score higher in exams than boys these days?
      Why women get better degrees?
      Why women earn more per hour for part-time work?
      Why women get a year off for a new child and men get two weeks? (In the UK; Denmark has a fairer system)
      Why men are more likely to be assaulted than women?
      Why men under 25 are more likely to be victims of domestic violence than women?
      Why women claiming rape get anonymity while the men they accuse get named in the press, even if the woman made the accusation up?
      Why men are more likely to commit suicide than women?

      Too fucking right I'm taking it personally.

    9. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      If someone offends me with a statement, and I find out that it was truly unintentional, then it's hard to stay offended/angry. I may still be sad or whatever, but I would stop accusing the person of being an asshole.

      Yes, you forgive them for making the remark. That's the civilized response to misunderstanding. But that doesn't actually change the nature of the remark. Intent has very little to do with it, actually, because part of the problem is that sexism is unconscious and automatic.

      If someone accidentally says something racist, and they're sorry about it, that's good. That's how we learn. But what they said was still racist. You hear a lot less of that than you did even 20 years ago, and its because we're generally a lot more sensitive to racism now.

      We can ignore all kinds of little annoyances and slips and mistakes in society. The problem is that if you ignore the little stuff, you have fewer opportunities to expose the people who are big time (and I mean dangerously) racist, sexist, or whatever. Your boss might tell a few off-color jokes now and then, does it mean he hates women? Maybe he doesn't. But maybe one of your colleagues does, and his behavior is reinforced by the boss's jokes. That's not okay.

      Again, I say: Don't take it personally. Just because you say or do something sexist doesn't mean you're an asshole. You just didn't know.

      The mark of an asshole is that he denies the offense, or tries to make excuses for it, or immediately changes the subject to how oppressed men are, too. Just don't. Go outside and yell at the moon or something instead.

    10. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Yes, you forgive them for making the remark. That's the civilized response to misunderstanding. But that doesn't actually change the nature of the remark. Intent has very little to do with it, actually, because part of the problem is that sexism is unconscious and automatic.

      Okay well you are sticking to your position of defining the nature of the remark based on the receiver and not the person making the remark. I don't think that's a feasible system for the example I gave before. I'm pretty sure I'm in the majority on this issue because if you look at other systems like the judicial system, intent plays a huge role.

      The mark of an asshole is that he denies the offense, or tries to make excuses for it, or immediately changes the subject to how oppressed men are, too. Just don't.

      I disagree. The mark of an asshole is that he intended the remark to be offensive, or that, after knowing it offends someone, does it anyway (amounts to the same thing). It's a subset of what you're saying, in a way, and in another way it's a superset (because I think you can still be an asshole even if you apologize right afterwards).

      You are denying people the ability to disagree with you because even trying to clarify what you said makes them an asshole. That's an incredibly unfair system. If someone doesn't have the opportunity to say "Well, I didn't mean that, see, I'm not bad..." then you've created a very harsh, judgmental system.

    11. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the larger issue is that as a man you have no *inherent* frame of reference by which to decide whether they are right or wrong or how serious or trivial it is.

      This is exactly the issue - namely that the criterion you're using is that if some woman somewhere dislikes something a man says, and calls "sexism", that makes the man sexist and there is no way for him to rebut the claim. I call bullshit. Adopting that line of thinking creates a race to the bottom in which any easily-offended person gets to define anything that bothers them as socially unacceptable speech. It's nonsense and an insult to those who care about REAL sexism.

      My point is that you, as a man, are probably not an able judge of what is sexist and what is not. (Maybe YOU are, but this isn't personal. I'm talking about men generally.)

      Any individual is allowed to be offended by anything. When you deny that they should be offended, you are basically dissing their point of view. That's not constructive. They may have very good reasons for being offended. If those reasons are compounded by a history of oppression, you look as if you are trying to deny more than just your individual offense, and that's just ugly.

      For speech to be socially unacceptable it has to offend more than just a small group of easily-offended people, so I think you can put that fear to rest.

      We do need to have some sense and understanding of each other. But let's admit that for generations (if not forever) men have been forcing their understanding on women, without allowing much in the other direction. So I think we can afford to chill out a little, step back and say "Huh. You think that was sexist? I'm sorry. I didn't mean to be, and I'll put it differently next time." That's all.

      It's not labeling. Just because someone says that what you said or did is sexist doesn't mean that you ARE sexist. It just means that it can be perceived that way. You can't argue with that, and you shouldn't try.

    12. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm recommending that you not disagree with someone who claims that something you said is sexist.

      By all means, clarify your intentions. But denying it doesn't work, because it really IS about their perception and context. You can't change that, and it's not unfair or unjust.

      We agree that it would be unjust for a court of law to work that way. But we're not talking about that, and anyway we have first amendment protection for sexist speech. You would have to cause actual harm in order to be convicted of something.

      Thanks, seriously. I respect your arguments.

    13. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait...so discrimination on the basis of sex isn't actually sexism unless it's a man doing it?

      Sounds like some kind of double standard to me.

    14. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by redhog · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as original sin. You are not guilty unless you intentionally, knowingly did it. I grew up with that shit. It made me the strange, over-sensitive person I am.

      --
      --The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
    15. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by redhog · · Score: 1

      "But you can't call that sexism, because that would imply that women were in charge, and making the rules."

      And what is your argument against that? Women are after all the ones selecting men for the top price of life - creating a family. As men are the ones selecting women. (I disregard homosexuals here as that is about 5% of the population, and an error of 5% most likely won't destroy my argument)

      Women certainly are making the rule that men needs to be macho.

      The distribution of power need not be the same in all parts and functions of the society. Average power isn't important, what's important is the power distribution in the context where the sexist behavior occurs.

      And sexism does not _have_ to have anything to do with paid-for-employment and industries. You can as well be a sexist at home, or there might be sexist policies in government, education, at the hospital or in NGOs.

      --
      --The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
    16. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm recommending that you not disagree with someone who claims that something you said is sexist.

      So if I say that your argument is sexist, you'll just apologize and not even question it? I did find it sexist when you said "the larger issue is that as a man you have no *inherent* frame of reference by which to decide whether they are right or wrong". I think that's very sexist.

      We agree that it would be unjust for a court of law to work that way. But we're not talking about that, and anyway we have first amendment protection for sexist speech.

      I brought that up to illustrate that most people take intent into account when judging someone's actions. Since you agree that it should work that way in a court, why shouldn't it work that way in a plain misunderstanding?

    17. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      You missed the point - it's only sexist if there is power involved.

    18. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      the top price of life - creating a family.

      Lineage only really matters in hierarchic societies, few if any have ever been dominated by men. And evolution isn't something that happens to the individual, but to groups.

      Women certainly are making the rule that men needs to be macho.

      No, funny how the "nice guy" comes out heh

    19. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      *correction* - few if any have ever been dominated by women

    20. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      You break your own argument with your example. A woman in charge of hiring a man *does* have power over him in that relationship. I think your real argument was for a society-wide power arrangement.

      I would argue that access to social acceptance carries a fair amount of power as well. Women can be just as "sexist" against women - if you can't get hired by another woman because you don't conform to gender norms, but are otherwise competent? If that is not sexism, then we're going to have to start inventing a bunch of new 'isms.

    21. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      My point is that you, as a man, are probably not an able judge of what is sexist and what is not. (Maybe YOU are, but this isn't personal. I'm talking about men generally.)

      Why not? Seems to me a man has a brain between his ears just like a woman does. Surely that brain is capable of analyzing a situation to determine whether something is sexist. To say that men (generally) are incapable of such a things seems ... sexist.

      Any individual is allowed to be offended by anything. When you deny that they should be offended, you are basically dissing their point of view. That's not constructive.

      Sure, anyone is allowed to be offended. And someone else is allowed to be offended by the first person taking offense at an innocent remark. So we can all get offended, and nobody will be any better off.

      The question we should be asking ourselves is at what point does "taking offense" cease being a useful tool against bad behavior, and degenerate into bad behavior itself?

      There's an old rule of thumb in life to never attribute to malice what can be explained by an innocent mistake. The corollary is never to attribute to bias what can be explained by an honest miscommunication. Following this rule is the way to be constructive.

      We do nobody any favors by encouraging them to interpret others' comments in the least favorable, rather than the most favorable, way. All it does is damage their social interactions with good people, and create a death spiral in which their accusations of bias to well-meaning people earn them the very enmity they were worried about.

      But let's admit that for generations (if not forever) men have been forcing their understanding on women, without allowing much in the other direction

      There is no doubt that in the past, society has had failings in terms of allowing women equal roles in things like politics and the workplace.

      That said, I think it's a misunderstanding of the power dynamic between men and women to say "without allowing much in the other direction". Women shape the behavior of both men and women far more than men do. They just do it in less overt ways, through social ostracism and criticism rather than through force. Even in these supposedly patriarchal western societies, you'll find it's women being the enforcers of the societal status quo.

      When women were expected to stay at home, many of the sharpest criticism of working women came from other women. These days when women are expected to work, the sharpest criticism of stay-at-home moms comes from - you guessed it- other women.

      What men wear is shaped by women. What women wear is, unless she's on a date, also largely shaped by what other women would think of her. If a woman wears something revealing or simply unfashionable, most men won't care and almost certainly won't say anything negative. But she may well get crucified by other women, and odds are she'll "correct" herself next time.

      And to this day, while gaining increased roles in formerly male-dominated realms, women expect to (and usually do) maintain their dominance in traditionally female realms, such as family and child-rearing matters, what type of home to get, etc.

      How often do you see a man get custody of his kids in a divorce, unless the woman is a heroin addict or a convicted murderer?

      When two underage teenagers have consensual sex, how often do you see the female of the pair charged with statutory rape instead of the male?

      Society's history is far more complex than just a tale of men dominating women. Women's exercises of power seem to be less noticed (perhaps because it's often done with more skill and less bluster).

    22. Re:Sexism is so pervasive we don't see it by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      So when we are called on sexist behavior, our first reaction is to get massively defensive and deny the problem. We're not sexist! We think sexism is evil! Some of my best friends are women! Uh-huh. The problem is, the person calling you on your sexism ISN'T making it up. From her point of view, denying it just means you're as clueless as all the other men.

      No, clueless is calling someone sexist and refusing to explain WHY you think it's sexist. There's one woman somwhere in this thread who berated a guy who was praising a woman's intelligence and courage, saying "I'd date her". IMO her remark was sexist - sexism, like racism, goes both ways. A sexist thinks his or her sex is superior to the opposite sex, and I think you'll find most feminists share the opinion that women are better than men. Wanting to date a woman because you admire her is the farthest thing from sexism there is.

      The best thing to do is acknowledge, apologize, and try to accept that what you said or did was sexist. Even if you don't know why. Even if you think it wasn't.

      So in other words, even if you don't know why she's pissed and she won't tell you why she's pissed and you're sure she's wrong, kiss her ass? THAT is a sexist remark, and unfortunately far too many woman have that attitude. I find it appalling.

      And the rules, in our society, aren't fair to women.

      The rules in our society are far more fair to woman than men. Yes, when I was a kid in the 50s and 60s it was the other way around, but equal opportunity is enshrined in law. Men are becoming second class citizens. Many women these days think it's OK to physically hit a man, or throw a drink at him. IT ISN'T.

      Ms. Pot, meet Mr. Kettle.

  74. let me get this straight by jipn4 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In other words, women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

    Because women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, men are sexist? Sorry, I just don't follow that logic.

    Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible -- being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

    Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"? Great going, Bruce: show off your feminist stance by insulting another minority group.

    1. Re:let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"?

      I don't know that I'd say it rises to the level of abuse, but it is a sexist insult.
      You see, homosexuals are looked down upon because they're taking on the traits of females. And since females aren't
      nearly as good as males to someone with a sexist worldview, calling someone a "homo" is sexist.

    2. Re:let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"? Great going, Bruce: show off your feminist stance by insulting another minority group.

      When it's meant as an insult, yes, it's abusive to gay people. Same as people saying "that's so gay" about everything.

    3. Re:let me get this straight by rantingkitten · · Score: 1

      To the type of person who would use "gay" or "homo" as an pejorative, yes, it is abuse, in the sense that when they say "You're gay" or "What a homo," they intend these things to be insulting. The recipient might not think it's insulting, but you have to look at the intent of the person saying it.

      --
      mirrorshades radio -- darkwave, industrial, futurepop, ebm.
    4. Re:let me get this straight by Kruemelmo · · Score: 1

      Because women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, men are sexist?

      He didn't say that.

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"?

      Yes, if the caller uses the term in an abusive context.

    5. Re:let me get this straight by jipn4 · · Score: 1

      The recipient might not think it's insulting, but you have to look at the intent of the person saying it.

      No, I don't. What matters here is not what Bryce might have wanted to express, but the language he actually used to express it. Bryce said is that he was "abused" by being called a "homosexual". That kind of statement perpetuates the idea that a neutral description of someone's sexuality is in itself abusive or insulting. It is offensive and insensitive.

    6. Re:let me get this straight by deathbird · · Score: 1

      In other words, women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

      Because women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, men are sexist? Sorry, I just don't follow that logic. Women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, because men are sexist. FTFY

      Because I took a feminist stance in public, I have been abused in every way possible -- being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"? Great going, Bruce: show off your feminist stance by insulting another minority group.

      Yeah, I mean that's so GAY, amiright?

    7. Re:let me get this straight by Menkhaf · · Score: 1

      When it's meant as an insult, yes, it's abusive to gay people. Same as people saying "that's so gay" about everything.

      That's so gay.

      --
      A proud member of the Onion-in-Hand alliance
    8. Re:let me get this straight by westlake · · Score: 1

      Because women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, men are sexist? Sorry, I just don't follow that logic.

      You have more invested than your time and skills - you have invested your trust in others and your own self-respect:

      When the environment is hostile it makes sense to move on.

      The argument isn't that men are sexist - it's that the geek is sexist - or - more tellingly - sexually immature.

      Adolescent.

    9. Re:let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women don't volunteer their time for FOSS development, because men are sexist. FTFY

      Men are sexist in all other environments as well, often much more so than FOSS. Lots of women are in medicine, the law, the military, despite sexism.

      Whatever the reason women don't volunteer for FOSS, an unusually high level of sexism isn't it.

    10. Re:let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"? Great going, Bruce: show off your feminist stance by insulting another minority group.

      Recognizing that a particular term is used in a derogatory manner is not the same as stating that said term should be used in a derogatory manner, or that said term is inherently derogatory.

    11. Re:let me get this straight by basicio · · Score: 1

      You know, I somehow doubt 'homosexual' was the word used.

    12. Re:let me get this straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean being called a homo isn't abuse? You mean you wouldn't want to be called a homosexual, a faggot or a shit-stabber?

      Heck, I would be upset if that happenned.. and I would ass rape the guy/girl who calls me that with a broomstick.

    13. Re:let me get this straight by BarMonger · · Score: 1

      Being called a "homosexual" is "abuse"?

      Yes it is. If the person calling him a homosexual means it in an abusive way.
      Just like being called a coward, even if he is a coward. Or when you call an idiot, an idiot. It's still abuse.

  75. Many in IT hate irrationality, which sexismism is. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many in IT are rational people. Rational people are often disdainful of perceived irrationality.

    The "sexism detection movement" is irrational. This is because it fails to define sexism in a way which can be applied BOTH by women on the actions of men, and by men on the actions of women.

    For example, if a man writes a book where the men are heroes and all the women are evil, backstabbing, lazy sluts, then he would be described as a sexist against women.

    When Stieg Larsson writes a book where all the men are are evil, backstabbing, lazy sluts, then he isn't sexist at all. In fact, one of the female characters has "sex" by walking into the room of a man, climbing on top of him to his great surprise and shock and riding him until she is satisfied. Whoa hey - surprise sex? MEN LOVE IT! ALL MEN! ALL MEN LOVE HAVING SEX WITH ANY WOMEN WHO WANTS TO RIDE THEM AT ANY POINT IN TIME! /irony.

    Hence, the sexism movement is irrational and idiotic.

  76. It's indeed pervasive in society by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

    I've read the article (yeah sue me), and I really liked this link: http://www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-HOWTO/Encourage-Women-Linux-HOWTO.html
    If anything just read the bit "1.2. What problem? Sexism is dead!"
    If you don't see what the problem is, and just think the two guys are making a funny comment, then you're probably oblivious to a lot of sexism going on in the world.

    Once you open your eyes, you'll see that there is a lot of sexism (and racism) in the world still. Some of it so ingrained that even some women don't notice it, especially if they grew up with it.

    It's a really hard thing to see part your own culture and put things in perspective.

    I think the article makes a good point that often people don't have bad intentions, and get defensive when accused. I do think that there still is a lot of unintentional sexism in our society.

    It's as simple as assuming the male is the person in charge when meeting a man and a woman in a business environment, like for example a job interview.
    It's assuming the girl wants to be a nurse and the boy a doctor when you see some children playing with some toy hospital equipment.
    It's simple comments like: "You silly girl", or "I wouldn't have expected that of a woman".
    It's also that men are more expected to work late then women.

    --
    RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    1. Re:It's indeed pervasive in society by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      Well just have a look at point 3.19 and then let's talk about stereotyping again

      3.19. Don't micro-specialize

      Maybe you and your friends are perfectly happy to show up to your local LUG and talk about the same topics (the latest video card, first-person shooters, robots) every week, but for whatever reason, few women have the endless interest in minutiae that men often display. Try not to have all your speakers talk about micro-specialties, or always discuss the same areas of robotics.

      So, dumb down for the women or what? I don't get it.

  77. There are TWO, separate, issues by bolthole · · Score: 1

    There are actually two issues buried in the one

    One issue is, "why are the number of female FOSS developers so low?"

    The other is, "are open software developers sexist?"

    I would suggest that the "answer" to the latter one, is "no more than a random sample of males of similar age groups and location"

    I would also suggest that the "answer" to the former one is, "because most women just arent interested in doing it".
    At its core, "FOSS" software, starts as a project by an individual. There are ZERO barriers to entry for a woman interested in doing so. You dont need anyone's permission. You dont need money. All you need is Time, and Interest in doing so.

    Women generally arent interested in "hard science" type stuff. Sure, SOME are, but the majority simply are not INTERESTED.
    feminazis will want to scream that is sexist, blah blah. But simple facts, are not sexist. they simply are.
    Reinforcement of this can be found by looking at the small areas where women ARE getting involved in open source the most.
    I havent done an extensive study on this, but I've noticed a trend on the handful of "women in open source" articles over the last few months. The women pulled up as examples, are primarily working on... social networking/forum/blog type software.

    Hmm. startling news. Not.
    Women get involved in what interests them. That sort of stuff interests them. But the majority of FOSS projects, do not interest them. So, they dont participate. Mystery solved.

    Feminists always seem to be desperate to prove that "men and women are the same", reguardless of facts.
    Well guess what? They are NOT THE SAME. This is obvious to any 5 year old, unless they fall into the clutches of the "womyn" brainwashing troups.

  78. Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by mi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What reports of sexism have there been? Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women?

    For decades, it has been accepted, that statistics is evidence. Recognizing, that there can be legitimate differences in inclinations towards certain activities among genders is a big no-no. The only exception is made for negative inclinations — such as increased aggressiveness — among males, or positive — such as attention to detail — among females, err, scratch that — "female" has a "male" in it — the proper term is womyns.

    That the same testosterone (or whatever it really is), that makes males more aggressive on average may also make them more determined scientists or more involved FOSS-developers, is not mentioned... Or, perhaps, one needs to have been nerdy and suffer from bullying — something girls rarely have to go through — in school to look for a recreational outlet online.

    Whatever the real reasons for disparity, claiming "sexism" in FOSS — the activity, that's done almost exclusively via Internet, where nobody knows your real gender (nor race, for that matter, nor even species!), is beyond stupid, of course. But by pointing this out, a person — myself included after I typed the previous sentence — automatically becomes a "sexist in denial". I guess, I need therapy now...

    Lastly, the 1.5% is not bad — among FreeBSD-project, for example, there were 0 (zero!) females, last time I checked. The situation only "improved" a little bit, when one guy (from San Francisco, of all places), announced his gender- (and name-) change...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by I_want_information · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or, perhaps, one needs to have been nerdy and suffer from bullying — something girls rarely have to go through...

      WTF, Are you kidding me? Seriously? You obviously haven't been -- repeatedly -- the only "girl" in years of math and science classes, surrounded by immature leering little boys who repeatedly make crude sexual jokes and suggestions in your general direction, tolerated by a male teacher whose attitude is "boys will be boys" and "stop being so sensitive." Then, when such behaviours are publicly denounced as uncivil, watch in amazement as otherwise intelligent male humans will leap up to *defend* such behaviour as normative. Do any of these people truly believe that this *should* be the price of admission that women *must* pay in order to join the fraternal order?

    2. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by Cederic · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, girls get bullied every bit as much as boys at school.

      The bullying is usually more psychological (as opposed to male physical bullying) but has comparable impacts on the victims.

      Not that this invalidates the broad thrust of your post.

    3. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by mi · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't been -- repeatedly -- the only "girl" in years of math and science classes

      No, I have not been neither a "girl" nor a girl anywhere. I have been a boy in a Math/Physics high school, to which admission was open wide to all — subject to passing entrance exams. The admission committee did favor girls, because there was a constant shortage of them applying.

      The girls were perfectly bright. There were, on average, 3 boys for each girl, which — contrary to your statement — did not lead to the girls being abused. The opposite was true — they could get whatever they wanted from the male classmates... (Or, perhaps, chivalry was not as dead in Ukraine 20 years ago, as it was in the US when you were growing up.)

      Your situation may have been different — I don't know it at all. But, it would seem, you are part of Slashdot community (at least), possibly even part of the 1.5% of the female part of FOSS. Your having been abused by classmates in school may have been a contributing reason. I'm sure, it does happen to girls too — just not as much.

      leering little boys who repeatedly make crude sexual jokes and suggestions in your general direction

      I guess, you've never seen/heard, what these "leering little boys" do to each other. In addition to "crude sexual jokes", they also beat each other up and rob of lunch monies, for example. It is all far more "uncivil", but we don't get to complain about "sexism". Teachers, parents, and the rest of the society just tell us to stop whining like a cry-baby and be a man... The girls agree (thanks to the evolution's programming) and overwhelmingly prefer to date the beaters over the beaten...

      Then, when such behaviours are publicly denounced as uncivil, watch in amazement as otherwise intelligent male humans will leap up to *defend* such behaviour as normative.

      Unfortunately, in high school (and among children in general) "uncivil" and "normative" are not opposites at all... I agree, that this sucks, but it is part of the sucky growing-up experience. Whether it justifies the dismissals of all your complaints and calling you "too sensitive", is a different story, but if the abuse you've suffered never exceeded "crude sexual jokes", I'd tend to agree with your teachers...

      Do any of these people truly believe that this *should* be the price of admission that women *must* pay in order to join the fraternal order?

      Sexism sure exists, but I don't at all think, Math/FOSS/Science is more sexist, than other vocations. Or do you think, you'd find fewer sexists among coal miners or firefighters? Heck, I'll repeat, that FOSS — where no one's gender is certain, and where nobody can normally see the other person — is far less sexist than average.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    4. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by Menkhaf · · Score: 1

      Thanks for this post.

      --
      A proud member of the Onion-in-Hand alliance
    5. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      More importantly, do any of you people actually believe this happens in the slightly amount?

      I went through college a decade ago. I went to second rate schools in the South. If there was anywhere that was going to be sexist, it was there.

      I saw nothing at all. No sexist comments or treatment whatsoever.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    6. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Statistically, much more men than women have ADD.

      Statistically, a larger portion of the coder population has ADD than would be normally expected. Especially the people who code for fun. Even accounting for gender differences.

      If we assume some sort of variable, called X, that at 100 results in ADD, and at 50 makes someone want to code for fun, and then we assume that this is more likely in men, we can easily explain the rates of men in OSS using the rates of men with ADD.

      People trying to point to what the various genders want to do as an example of sexist are just stupid. The genders sometimes want different things on average. Yes, there's a question if we're pushing people away from considering things because of sexism, but there's also the damn fact that a lot of men don't really want to be nurses. (To pick a rather uncontroversial example.)

      A woman might be fine as a programmer as a job, and, just like a lot of people, be good at her work without particularly enjoying it.

      But such a person is unlikely to end up doing OSS.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    7. Re:Statistics IS evidence -- "flamebait" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most academic classes do acknowledge gender differences, as supported by research. The guy in the article you liked to was calling for research on a topic. While this is not necessarily a bad thing, the fact that he was calling for research into that topic meant he on some level believed there was something to women being innately less proficient in math. While THAT is not necessarily a bad thing, he was also responsible for tenure decisions regarding female math professors and the leading figure of the entire school. Soon after the backlash he realized his statements were idiotic, if for no other reason than he essentially claimed some of his employees were innately deficient.

      Regarding yourself, it is pretty obvious you ARE an anti-feminist and a reactionary. Your impassioned offense at the topic is pretty clear evidence of it.

  79. Re:Hey women by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 1

    nope but apparently the person in the article does

  80. Don't use terms you don't understand. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And before you respond, tell me if you'll need a tractor to help you with all the goalpost moving you're doing.

    Don't use terms you don't understand. I said 0.1% and I have not changed that.

    Now, to contradict your 54 examples (provided on a page that seems dedicated to finding such examples), I'll tell you about the Linux Kernel Mailing List which has thousands of non-sexist comments. Thousands. And that is a SINGLE mailing list.

    Or is it that you do not understand what 0.1% means?

    1. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by baronben · · Score: 0, Troll

      Okay, let's take you're example of .01%. So, one out of every 1000 posts contains sexiest language. That's a problem in of itself. It doesn't solve the problem to say that other things are worse. Obviously 4Chan will have more sexist and racist comments than the Debian mailing list. Open source development is based on a community model of development. If you want it to succeed, you need to understand that when one part of the group gets attacked because of some intrinsic attribute about them, you're going to have problems. Do you want Linux distributions to be better? That means you need every single talented person who's willing to contribute to contribute. And I guarantee you there are a lot more women developers who would be willing to contribute than there are men who will quite over being "censored" when someone asks them not to make an ass of themselves.

    2. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you keep clinging to the same argument when people keep throwing numerous unique counter-arguments in your face?

    3. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by amplt1337 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Who the hell keeps modding you up for posting the same non-point over and over?

      I'll tell you about the Linux Kernel Mailing List which has thousands of non-sexist comments. Thousands.... Or is it that you do not understand what 0.1% means?

      Let's say that your father has THOUSANDS of perfectly normal and loving interactions with you, twenty a day for over twenty years. Surely that's enough that you won't notice the one time he snuck in your room at night and raped you, right?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    4. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You hopeless idiot. The LKML is a collection of hardcore kernel developers. It's probably as close as you can get to strictly business. You're the kind of person who would say rape is not a problem because it doesn't happen in libraries. Great. I would be deeply disturbed if people were getting raped in libraries. I go there to study.

      The set of locations in which rape happens is far larger than "libraries". Just as the space in which sexism can occur in the FOSS community is far larger than your little mailing list. Plenty of helpful people have posted examples of things happening outside the LKML. It's great that one mailing list avoids that. Gold star for you. I'll give it to you when you take your head out of the sand.

      By the way, I still don't know what you're trying to prove with your gender statistics. Okay, 98.5% of the people on there are men. Does that make them more likely to make sexist comments? I would wager that more friction arises when the gender ratios are relatively even, because now you actually have to interact with women on a regular basis.

    5. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Or is it that you do not understand what 0.1% means?

      It means 1 in every 1000 comments. That's actually pretty high. Frankly, I'm surprised that the amount is so high. Where are you getting that figure?

      Do things like kernel networking code get that much discussion time? Display or interface code? If you're meeting sexist comments more often than you come across discussion of heaps, there's something wrong with your kernel mailing list.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    6. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      You seem pretty pleased with your 0.1% number, but have you thought about what that really means? Consider a normal workplace environment. If you were a woman and, in your office, one out of every 1000 interactions with a coworker included references to porn or some of the other examples commenters have dug up, I think you would have a decent Title VII lawsuit.

      It doesn't take frequent, repetitive sexist comments to create an environment of sexism. Particularly when you couple this with the perpetual frat party that is today's internet culture.

    7. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by GryMor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nope, but your father is an individual actor, not a group. Always condemn the individual actors for their personal behavior when that behavior is deserving of condemnation. But, to bootstrap those instances, in aggregate to indicate a problem with the group as a whole (as opposed to a simple indication that, in this dimension, the group is a random subset of society as a whole), you would need to show that the prevalence of the problem among the group exceeds the prevalence in society as a whole. Per message rates, if collected systematically from different communities, could be a suitable proxy for comparing prevalence, but it breaks down if your sample size is minuscule (in your example, 1). Fortunately for us, society as a whole and the FOSS community don't have minuscule sample sizes.

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    8. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      because 54 posts is statistically insignificant in the face of foss mailing-lists
      2 keynotes speeches are statistically insignificant in the face of thousands

      I've not even seen a rejection of code on the basis women can't code, and that is saying something where code can be rejected pretty arbitrarily.

      For anything to be taken seriously you need to show a statistical significant amount of sexism relative to the large amount of people being jerks.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    9. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      That was a lot of fancy terminology, but the GP is using an entirely false analogy. The kernel-dev mailing list is not representative of the Linux community as a whole being significantly more narrowly focused on technical development issues than the lists that any average linux user (male or female) ever interacts with.

      Moreover, the appropriate unit of comparison is not the post, but the thread. The number of posts exceeds the number of threads by an order of magnitude or more, but a single post is likely to taint a thread in the viewer's eye.

      All of which is besides the point. There are actual documented instances of sexist threads in various user and dev lists causing women to leave the community (at least on the Debian lists), so the statistical mumbo-jumbo is just an attempt to deny that a problem exists.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    10. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by GryMor · · Score: 1

      The kernal dev mailing list and a few perl lists are the only forum level interaction I have with FOSS outside my workplace. As I don't recall seeing any sexist comments (caveat, I don't read everything) in this lists, and I do recall seeing sexist comments in other forums I participate in, unrelated to FOSS it seemed odd to be condemning me, as a member of the FOSS community when as far as I can tell, from my own interactions, the FOSS community may as well be ungendered.

      Are those instances occurring at a rate greater than that in society as a whole? Are they occurring at a rater greater than equivalent alternatives? If they are at equivelent rates, then those forums are, as expected, subsets of society as a whole, with no selection bias along this dimension.

      If a single post, tainting a single thread on a forum is sufficient to taint the entire forum, then all forums, on all topics are equally tainted and this discussion is useless, as at that point everyone is equally sexist and racist with regards to all groups.

      I say once again, condemn individual behavior when that individual behavior deserves condemnation, but unless the goal is to alienate everyone, do not condemn communities when they are doing substantially better than the norm, especially when the problem at hand (or even the dimension within which it resides) isn't a topic of the community.

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    11. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that case my male friends in the nursing and care industries must be being discriminated against terribly, what with their predominantly female co-workers occasionally talking about sex or referring to men they know in vaguely sexual terms such as "cute".
      Obviously that's what's keeping men out of the care industries.... oh wait.... feminists seem to claim that that's mens fault too and women aren't keeping men out, it's men keeping women down and forcing them into those jobs.

      Feminism seems to have shed the sensible sane women over the last few years and left a core of angry nuts who blame all their problems on men.

    12. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by amplt1337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I do not participate in a whole lot of FOSS mailing lists, not near as much as I'd like (I lurk on more than I participate in), and it's specifically the Debian lists where I've seen issues. (Most of my perl lists are sadly inactive, actually...) As a participant myself, I certainly wouldn't claim to be condemning you -- this is not about individual action, but about the overall culture of different communities or institutions (so, institutionalized sexism, rather than so-and-so being a prick). That in turn is more about what behavior is accepted by community norms than about individual actions.

      So that out of the way, I think at that point you have to step back and consider the really striking sex-based differential in participation. That is a fact that we would like to be able to explain. Even if the explanation is sex-based disinterest in FOSS among women, I think it would still merit exploring to see if that interest tracks with the extent to which the community is welcoming to female participants (not in a warm-fuzzy-emotional-validation way, but in a "you won't get hit on or see people like you treated like a sex vending machine" way). I also definitely think you would need to look at community norms to explain the 20-times-greater participation of women in the corporate-coding space than the FOSS-coding space (since that difference can't be explained based on differential interest in the subject matter or basic skills).

      So the question to me would then become, are instances of sexism or woman-negative-interactions happening more frequently in the FOSS community than in other communities where women are more prevalent? Not the community at large, but than communities where women are more represented. After all, if society at large is hostile to women, then meeting just that standard wouldn't be enough to encourage female participation within the FOSS community in their spare time; they'd go somewhere they feel *more* welcome than society at large.

      At this point we've hit a snag, being unable to separate cause from effect. Naturally groups with larger female representation will be more welcoming to women, through familiarity if nothing else; but that's precisely the issue with institutionalized sexism--guys who never talk to women have no idea what to say and (understandably!) look at the women like they have antlers, which creeps the women out, who then leave, reducing everybody's learning experiences and diversity and all that. The cause is the effect, at a level of existence as well as analysis.

      None of which is to say that welcomingness-to-women is necessarily the right variable to isolate, or that our inability to think of another one would mean that it was the right variable. But when we have high-profile instances of women indicating it as one reason for them not to participate equally in the community, it's at least worthy of consideration. And to break down the institutional biases, we'd need to be *more* attentive to ways in which the culture might repel women, and be *more* welcoming to women than society-at-large is, in order to attract them to a society where they're underrepresented.

      That's a lot of theory and not much in the way of statistics, but hey, I'm at work! Does it at least make clear where folks who think like me might be coming from?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    13. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by brkello · · Score: 1

      Because their counter-arguments have yet to refute his argument. Even beyond that, sexism exists (both ways). For it to be a significant problem in FOSS, it would need to be a problem greater than what exists in society already. I don't deny that sexism exists, but is it causing women to stay away from FOSS? I got my Masters in C.S. I only met 2 American females in all of my studies. There are just less women in the field. And people on the Internet are mean and say stupid things no matter what you are. So unless people are not getting jobs or their code isn't accepted solely on the basis of their gender...and this is people just saying stupid things every now and then, I think it is being overblown just to get attention for the author.

      --
      Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    14. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Menkhaf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who the hell keeps modding you up for posting the same non-point over and over?

      I would if I had mod points. The guy has a point. Almost all guys, no sexism (none that I've ever seen) -- where else in society do you see that? Building workers, constructers, plumbers, farmers? What?

      --
      A proud member of the Onion-in-Hand alliance
    15. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Let's say that your father has THOUSANDS of perfectly normal and loving interactions with you, twenty a day for over twenty years. Surely that's enough that you won't notice the one time he snuck in your room at night and raped you, right?

      Really? Comparing sexist comments with incestuous rape?
      If that's the best you can do to refute his point, then I think he wins.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    16. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1

      Nice false equivalency. First, escalating the comparison to rape to seek out an emotional response. Second, comparing hundreds of people making thousands of comments in which a subset were asshats to a situation in which one person's acceptable behavior is irrelevant to their commission of a grievous crime.

    17. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      posting the same non-point over and over

      Because some people are too fucking stupid to get it the first time. Or second time. Or third time.

      Surely that's enough that you won't notice the one time he snuck in your room at night and raped you, right?

      Or fourth time...

    18. Re:Don't use terms you don't understand. by Robb · · Score: 1

      Your claim that the Linux Kernel Mailing List is representative of OSS discussion forums suggests limited knowledge. I always found the LKML to be much better than most other forums.

  81. 65.6 male/1 female by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Given: Human Gender Ratio in the physical world ~= 1 male/1 female

    Given: Human Gender Ratio in FOSS ~= 65.6 male/1 female

    Therefore: FOSS is not Gender neutral

    Delima:
    1_FOSS inherently favors males.
    or
    2_Sexism has been built into FOSS
    _a) intentionaly
    _b) unintentionally

    Given: studies in under representation in Sciences, Math and Engineering, have found NO inherit factors that can contribute to such ludicrous ratios as 65.6/1

    Therefore: Sexism has been built into FOSS, either intentionally or unintentionally.

    so what is it gonna be ppl Murder or Manslaughter?

  82. I think it would help to define terms. by germansausage · · Score: 1

    How about this.

    First you define _exactly_ what you mean by sexism. Give me some concrete examples so I can understand.

    Then tell me exactly how _I_ am being sexist.

    I may agree with your definition of sexist and I may agree that my behaviour is sexist, and I may even decide to change that behaviour. This can only be a good thing.

    However, if all you have is a vague and general accusation i.e "FOSS is sexist!!" don't be surprised if you get a whole lot of irate denial back at you.

    Also if you state "only 1 % of FOSS devs are women, therefore FOSS must be sexist" you are making a logical leap that many of us will not follow.

  83. Please mod parent 'Troll'. by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    Thanks.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Please mod parent 'Troll'. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Seconded, mod GP troll.

  84. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by FiloEleven · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is that people just being petty or is it that meeting the first 80% of a goal is much easier than the last 20%?

  85. Is this whats left of women's lib? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not a apologetic self hating man pretending to be a feminist.. I believe in equal rights and I think after a certain point you can't force it, it has to be earned and it becomes the responsibility of the people who want the right. (this goes for all rights, race, sex, beliefs, etc).. I'm seriously disappointed in today's "feminists", instead of pushing women to do better in school, sciences, math, to be more competitive in the workplace, which would finally equalize the last remaining inequalities you nit pick on ridiculous nonsense..

    Wake up even for men programmers are a special breed of people.. ranging from normal, to exceptional but often to weird and introverted.. OH NO programmers are weird to women.. well guess what some of these men have very little to do with women and some are resentful of the lack of attention they get from women..

    Guess what you can pick any male dominated profession and you will probably get the same reactions if not worse.. sometimes they are actually justified.. am I a sexist no.. not at all.. but do I want to have a 120lb woman try to pull me out of a burning building. .hell no.. I want some jacked up testosterone filled muscle head who can lift me in one arm and my 50 inch plasma in the other arm (its my baby and I want it saved)..

    Do we need more female involvement in FOSS.. sure.. but than again we need more involvement in FOSS in general.. socialism in its true and best form..

    Now instead of wasting your time complaining about FOSS and programmers.. why don't you spend this time speaking to young women, explaining to them that fashion and entertainment are BS jobs and they should spend more time in the sciences.. All the laws are in place now it's up to women to step up and fill the roles that they complain they are represented properly in..

  86. Mod parent up! by khasim · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's all about the STATISTICS!

    And claiming that a handful of sexist comments proves anything when there are truckloads of non-sexist comments only shows that certain people WANT there to be an issue.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      I'm also getting tired of the fact the white male is the only legally discriminated against portion of the population now. The universal scape goat - it sucks, and I've been denied jobs based on my race and sex because other quotas were not met yet.

      Sadly, there's two problems with this.

      a) A large percentage of our demographic genuinely *are* racist, materialistic, generally evil individuals with superiority complexes, a la Dick Cheney. It really sucks for those of us who aren't, but unfortunately, the stereotype genuinely isn't entirely baseless. If we're really lucky, we might even get one of them responding to this post. ;)

      b) Because of the above, whenever anyone discriminates against us, it's not seen as discrimination, but actually a form of social justice, to the same extent that it's considered social justice to *not* be discriminatory towards other demographics. Hence, discrimination against us has complete social sanction. If we try and protest it, we're accused of being able to dish it out, but not being able to take it; or are simply told that payback's a bitch.

    2. Re:Mod parent up! by micheas · · Score: 1

      It is not about the percentage of comments being sexist it is about the frequency of being exposed to sexist comments.

      If every morning when you check the list you know there is going to be an offensive email will you some days just decide you don't want to deal with it and delete all the emails from the list?

      You know the saying there are lies, damn lies, and statistics.

      Val (linux kernel hacker) has mentioned in an interview that having a name that could be either male or female has helped her avoid a lot of what other women get subjected to in the open source world.

      What is interesting is that the drupalcon in Europe is flagged as an example while drupal is one of the few projects that seems to do a decent job getting women to code for it. So, just because there are sexist comments that annoy women, does not mean that this is the big problem just the most visible.

      It could be related to the ability of end users to scream directly at the developers of most projects, and several other structural issues.

      Their is variance among open source projects on their participation rates of women, and it might be more useful to compare what the projects that have women coding for them are doing compared to those that don't.

      That said, sexist comments are frequent enough to generate statistics about them. That in and of its self should be a bit of a red flag.

    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      a) Agreed - however the OTHER demographics are guilty of the same. I'm not saying it makes it ok in ANY demographic but

      b) sins of the fathers was something supposedly done away with long ago - seriously, we're not sanctioning against Germany for WWII, or Japan for that or the way they used to treat the Chinese, nor are we attacking descendants of Africans that sold other Africans to the white slave traders that I'm supposed to be the one paying for their sins despite the fact I'm at least a little Cherokee and a good portion of my heritage is from Europeans that didn't come here until the time period between WWI & WWII.

      I'm going to say the only way we're actually going to make this work is when we all decide to forget our heritage beyond all of us adopting the common founding fathers heritage. Uhmm, Native population excepted.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  87. Sexism in FOSS met with ire and denial? by homesnatch · · Score: 1

    First of all... Shut up! You are a bozo!
    Second of all... There's no sexism in FOSS...


    Did I cover everything?

  88. A dude-centered environment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A lot of people presume that the term "sexism" refers solely to the intentional denigration and/or repression of women, and using that definition it is easy to see why people fail to identify the sexist elements of FOSS culture and react so vehemently to accusations that it exists and is widespread. It is unlikely that anyone in the FOSS world wants there to be fewer women involved.

    What is indisputably the case is that the culture is male-oriented. Whether this is due to explicitly exclusionary practices or more benign gender-oriented predisposition is irrelevant. When 98.5% of the members of a population are male, the atmosphere is inevitably male-centric and therefore, like a locker room, inhospitable to varying degrees to female participants. RMS's speech and the "Perform like a pr0n star" presentation are clear evidence of this. Mean-spirited? Probably not. Inappropriate and potentially offensive in light of current workplace behavioral norms? Definitely. It is difficult (and counterproductive) to argue that these are isolated incidents which do not reflect at least some aspects of the FOSS culture as a whole. These are FOSS leaders that made these presentations - they have to reflect to some degree the mores of the majority of FOSS participants. Therefore while FOSS may not be sexist in the sense defined at the top of this post, it is certainly sexist with regards to its insensitivity to the POV of women involved in the movement. And how could it not be? It is overwhelmingly male.

    Rather than attacking the author of the article, who's actual arguments are admittedly weak (asking girls out on dates is totally natural), perhaps the community should solicit the opinions of female FOSS developers and establish a dialogue to find out a) why there are so few women and b) what the FOSS community can do to make the movement more hospitable and enticing to women.

  89. And you fail. by khasim · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Lets' repeat ObsessiveMathsFreak answer again. If I don't shoot you a thousand times, and then shoot you, there is no problem?

    Nice of you to try to engage in a discussion that you are not mentally prepared for.

    In the future, I recommend that you try to understand the topic under discussion prior to deciding to voice your opinion.

  90. "homosexual" as a form of abuse? by seasunset · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just the idea that there are some people that use the word homosexual as a form of abuse...

    And the fact that the author refers to being called homosexual as a form of abuse without inserting a caveat that he himself did not found it abusive...

    Yes, there is sexism. And homophobia, that is for sure. :(

    1. Re:"homosexual" as a form of abuse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they are not using a word as "a form of abuse". they are using it as an INSULT.

      BTW, to go alongside your "homophobia" ammo... do you have a word that means "not afraid of homosexuality, but opposed to it"?
      Or is it just more convenient when taunting people, to call them "homophobic"? 'cause ya know, calling people a chicken is just much more effective than being accurate.

      (note to unaware people: "-phobe" means "afraid of")

    2. Re:"homosexual" as a form of abuse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, to go alongside your "homophobia" ammo... do you have a word that means "not afraid of homosexuality, but opposed to it"?

      I think you're looking for "retarded".

    3. Re:"homosexual" as a form of abuse? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      You're looking for the word creationnist, or moron, are you, perchance, opposed to gravity?

    4. Re:"homosexual" as a form of abuse? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      also, phobe also means repulsed by

  91. Am I gonna have to choke a bitch?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell your mom to get in the kitchen and make me a sandwich!

  92. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the most astonishing aspect is how uniform and predictable the slashdot response is.

    You must be new here!

  93. Of mountains and molehills ... by quietwalker · · Score: 1

    Rather than typing, "Really?" with ever increasing levels of bold and italics, I'll try to address this in a more structured, rational way. Forgive me if this is too long for some, but there were many points made by the article author which need discussion or refutation.

    First, and somewhat most importantly, anti-female sexism in FOSS. The entirety of this claim rests on pure statistics: a small percent of FOSS contributors are female, in an unreferenced study, with purported validity due to opinion polls that mirror it's results somewhat. Let's just assume that the statistics are correct, and low. The author references this in a separate article he wrote.

    This statistic does not indicate that there are either active or passive pressures on females to avoid this self-declared membership. This statistic does not provide insight to the reason why it is so, or suggest rationale to explain it. By itself, it is a fact and further study would be required to determine the cause. Oddly, I cannot actually find any studies that would suggest that, merely the leap from statistic to unsupported assumption. It seems that this is a perfectly valid, unquestioned mechanism, though I can't see how any individual would rationally support it. Any hypothesizing on my part about what people used to determine sexism from what appears to be a single statistic is therefore pointless - I'd could spend all my time tilting at windmills trying to refute the unvoiced assumption.

    Second, much ado has been made about Richard Stallman's recent speech, indicating two separate items;
    - First, that Stallman is a representative who embodies as a whole - beliefs, motivation, goals - the entirety of those who declare themselves part of the FOSS community.
    - Second, that Stallman is sexist.
    Therefore, the claim goes, all of FOSS is sexist.

    I'll ignore dealing with the first. Obviously it's a fallacy not worth further consideration. Beyond that the text of his 'sexist' speech was;
    "And we also have the cult of the virgin of Emacs. The virgin of Emacs is any female who has not yet learned how to use Emacs. And in the church of Emacs we believe that taking her Emacs virginity away is a blessed act."

    I'm not going to simply leave you, the reader, to interpret that as you wish. This is one of Stallman's reoccurring phrases, making a parody comparison of the 'Cult of the Virgin Mary,' to operating Emacs in an intended humorous way. Apparently the gender specific is random, alternating between male, female, and on occasion being left out entirely. His meaning was simply parody. To interpret any other way is to ignore the meaning and the intent and requires a listener to deliberately inject their own personal views and interpretations upon that of the speaker.

    As a comparison, consider the phrase, "These are black days indeed." We know the speaker is discussing troubling times: he is not intending to say that people who's skins have a dark pigment are associated with trouble, and therefore it is a racist construct. It takes just such a leap to consider that text sexist.

    Next we have a common circular argument construct I see used far too often, by individuals who do not even realize the absurdity of their suggestions. The author indicates that questioning if the problem exists indicates that you are a contributor of the problem. In this, the implicit assumption is made: There is a problem, and to even question it places you in the opposing camp. He even cites correspondence with just such an individual as 'proof' that proves the assumption. We see this quite often with other arguments, but it is exceptionally popular with minority political issues; [you] are guilty of brand-x discrimination. Your denial of your guilt/suggestion that brand-x discrimination does not exist proves that brand-x discrimination exists and that you, being blind to it, are guilty of it.

    It is clear this is not a rational argument.

    I'll wrap this up with one a few statements regarding the

  94. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by Random2 · · Score: 1

    Well, troll threads do their job well. It's not like generalizations are actually of any worth.

    --
    "Our goal each year should be to increase the number of goals we set for ourselves!"
  95. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Idiomatick · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you live in a northeastern state maybe. Go anywhere where religiousness is decently above the average and you will see girls unable to work anywhere out of a dress and men with long hair beaten up. The worst one is discrimination against gays.

    I know a guy that is gender confused, bi-sexual with long hair fairly gender neutral and lives in a religious community. Growing up he got beaten regularly by a wide variety of the city, including people stoning him. He had his jaw broken a few times, been shoved down flights of stairs (this is half by adults too not kids) and even stabbed.

    Just because you happen to live in a nice part of the country don't think it is the same everywhere. Violent crimes over these things ramps up a lot as soon as you travel into the bible belt. I think defending 'equalists' (I much prefer equalists over feminists) is very important.

  96. Idiots abound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm always surprised how feminist arguments turn a vast majority of men into raving idiots. There is a huge inequality between the sexes, just check any wage comparisons.

    Constant sexual references are only a normal thing in same sex groups or amongst close friends. Many foss blogs, mailing lists, fora contain shitloads of sexual references. This naturally repels women, especially as they know that the likely hood that the poster is a slimy, ugly, creepy nerd is quite large.

    ---
    Man

  97. Then try a simple test. by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Create yourself TWO new accounts. One with a name that a teen boy would choose and the other with a name that suggests that you are a girl. Go on. Do it. Right now!

    Then the NEXT time this subject comes up, post similar comments (not trolls) from BOTH accounts.

    Then compare the scores and the follow up comments from the two accounts.

    I will bet that the comment from the girl-account will be ranked higher and have more "me too" comments than the boy-account.

    Sexism in FOSS does exist. But it isn't the type described by the author.

    Just look at this discussion. How many different accounts reference the SAME handful of incidents as "proof" that there is sexism and that anyone who disagrees is somehow "bad".

    THAT alone should be enough to tell you where the real problem is.

    1. Re:Then try a simple test. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Yes, we all know that lonely men tend to chase after anything that remotely smells like a woman. I've seen it in WoW, I've seen it here, I've seen everywhere. No need to prove that again.

      However, that's not what I was talking about or what the article discussed. The article talked about the fact that there is sexism at work in the field of FOSS. What I was talking about is that certain defensive comments indicate that the men uttering them are insecure little weasels who deserve all the contempt they get from women.

      Here are a couple of points to keep in mind:
      * not every presentation needs to be laced with porn in order to indicate sexism is present in an industry
      * sexism generally doesn't take place in comments on technical mailing lists. Sexism generally takes place during the social interaction of a social group.
      * You of all people should know that statistics can be gamed nine ways till Sunday. To dismiss specific instances of sexism as not broad enough to indicate a problem is disingenuous and insulting to those who were subjected to those instances.

      Finally, you know why I'm convinced that sexism is rampant in various software and videogame environments? Because I've met only a very small handful of women who weren't turned off enough by it that they switched industries. No, it doesn't mean that every male they meet at Comic-Con, in a software class, in a game or in a software development group is a chauvinist pig. What it does mean though is that they all meet enough chauvinist pigs to turn them off the field in general.

      Here's the reality for those of us who aren't sexist: the few bad apples are spoiling the fun for the rest of us. I'm perfectly ok with the topic being aired out on a regular basis, because it allows those little weasels I mentioned earlier to be properly smacked down.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  98. Don't Acknowledge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To some women, just acknowledging the fact that they are women is considered sexist.

  99. Keynotes LKML posts by pijokela · · Score: 1

    Stallman and Shuttleworth were both giving keynotes speeches and they are both leaders of the movement. If it was some random guy first posting on slashdot, it wouldn't matter, but if the leaders of a movement are sexist, the movement is sexist.

    I was reading these slashdot comments and I wanted examples too. Then I read some examples and now I'm convinced. Look at this Couch DB slideset:

    http://www.sarahmei.com/blog/2009/04/25/why-rails-is-still-a-ghetto/

    (That page has the actual presentation slodes - with porn.)

    Now, that is sexist. It really doesn't matter if there are 1000 slidesets without sexism to counter it.

  100. Nope. by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

    Why do I need to be 'there', in order to name an example of sexism. Doesn't seem to be a requirement.

    Why do I fail whenever I (or several others in the thread) try to explain that your defense in numbers of non-sexist posts is irrelevant.

    You show all the signs of a troll. /signing out.

    1. Re:Nope. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Because if only the people there are allowed to form an opinion, and most people there don't see a problem, then it effectively negates the problem.

  101. SEXISM! (Re:Refreshment of memory) by mi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Though, you know, it would be nice if people realized that it is generally a bad thing for people to be able to make death threats against women without being called on it.

    It is an awful thing for people to be able to make death threats against anyone without being called on it.

    I hereby denounce you as a sexist!

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:SEXISM! (Re:Refreshment of memory) by aicrules · · Score: 0, Troll

      Parent should be modded up. Parent parent is either saying that it's okay to make death threats against men or that women are too frail and stupid to protect/get necessary legal help themselves. And since we're talking about FOSS where most people are geographically anonymous, it's even less relevant to bring up a psychotic killer who chose gender lines as how to pick victims.

    2. Re:SEXISM! (Re:Refreshment of memory) by Golddess · · Score: 1
      Exactly. People forget that -isms go all ways, not just towards minorities in any given field.

      Yea you’ve become a developer and have done nearly nothing except shill your feminist shit and try to turn debian into a woman’s project (you are succeeding, men are leaving debian because of you and your ilk, worthless bitch).

      Having met some "feminazis", I find it not hard to believe that this person's comment may be entirely factual. That's not to say that that comment is automatically not sexist. Simply that you cannot simply supply that comment, without context, and say "ZOMG LOOK AT THIS SEXISM!" It just does not work that way.

      All that said, I do find it hard to imagine how one would turn a Linux distro into a distro aimed at a particular gender.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
  102. Textbook definition by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    He mentions geeks asking peer women out for a date as an example for being sexistic.

    The textbook definition of sexism is discrimination on the grounds of gender. So, unless you ask out men as well, technically you are being sexist.

    1. Re:Textbook definition by Qbertino · · Score: 1

      The textbook definition of sexism is discrimination on the grounds of gender. So, unless you ask out men as well, technically you are being sexist.

      You're actually right. But I do ask my buddies out to dinner and/or the movies and/or clubbing. Though I wouldn't call it a date, as that term implies the possiblity of intimate interests on my behalf. Which actually *do* apply to gender. To which, the own or the opposite is a matter of sexual orientation.

      But that is generally acceptable, since a woman asking me out would call it a date aswell. She wouldn't call asking her friend out a 'date'. Same thing here, and calling her a 'sexist' in this situation would be stressing the generic context of the term just as much.

      --
      We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    2. Re:Textbook definition by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      No, maybe you're homophobic and only date straight people.

      So you're willing to date straight men and women both, but have figured out the logical paradox there and stopped asking out men that you became immediately were prejudiced against when they said yes.

      It's like Groucho Marx's "I would not join any club that would have someone like me for a member.". 'I wouldn't date any men who'd date someone of my gender, because they're probably one of those f******.'

      ;)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  103. evidence? by e_hu_man · · Score: 1

    many people seem to be looking for evidence of sexism. this is the foss world, yes? we can look for the evidence in the source code and documentation. a quick grep through the docs folder for me turned up a few uses of exclusive "he" (though far outnumbered by inclusive "he/she" or "he or she") and no uses of exclusive "she," typically referring to the user. of course, you'll have to filter out legitimate uses of exclusive "he" and "she," such as when referring to an actual person (typically a developer), but everyone here should be able to see how latent the issue is (or not) themselves.

  104. People don't like being labeled with a pejorative. by Gudeldar · · Score: 1

    How exactly are you shocked when you suffer abuse after labeling an entire community with a pejorative word like "sexist". Also should we really take advice on discrimination from a guy who obviously thinks being called homosexual is abuse.

  105. I can take that challenge. by khasim · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd like you to prove that "only 0.1% of the comments" (which comments?) are sexist.

    I can take that challenge because I'm not blinded by ideology as you are.

    Read the LKML. There are thousands upon thousands of FOSS development comments there.

    So far, the people crying "sexism" have only been able to produce one page with 54 examples of sexist comments.

    So, with a single mailing list (out of many) I have demonstrated that fewer than 0.1% of the FOSS development comments are sexist.

    Unless you, for some reason, do not believe that the LKML is really about FOSS development. But then, that's your problem.

    1. Re:I can take that challenge. by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Unless you, for some reason, do not believe that the LKML is really about FOSS development.

      Nice preemptive strike.

      I don't see the LKML as being representative of the FOSS world in general. Many FOSS developers are application developers, not system developers. The LKML is only a sample of system developers, and FOSS is about far more than development on the Linux kernel (TMYK: it's even possible to write FOSS software for non-Linux platforms!).

      It may be a true statement to say that fewer than 0.1% of messages posted to the LKML can be considered sexist, but you can't extrapolate that to say that the same holds true among developers or projects not related to the Linux kernel.

      This isn't about sexism around the Linux kernel, this is about sexism in the FOSS world in general.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    2. Re:I can take that challenge. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      So, with a single mailing list (out of many) I have demonstrated that fewer than 0.1% of the FOSS development comments are sexist.

      Rounding up, it's actually closer to 0.05%

  106. Seriously dude.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you type F/L/OSS one more time im gonna come down there and kick your ass

  107. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by nog_lorp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is absurd. I'm a white male, but I can say I definitely see enough racism or sexism around me to argue it is still something that needs discussion.

    The idea that you need to intentionally discriminate to be racist or sexist makes no sense, actually. Modern discrimination usually comes from stereotyping rather than some sort of hatred.

  108. How long have you been a Misogynist? by mpapet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And the answer is, "I'm not." But the problem is the person getting the question has to prove a negative and is simultaneously labeled.

    The baseline premise is "Sexism exists in FOSS" and then comes the denials and the denials are variously flamed.

    Are there very bad actors in FOSS? Yes. But it's not unique to FOSS or any other social group. Do they need to be admonished and probably 'banished' in some way? Yes. Because the behavior is entirely inappropriate regardless of gender.

    If you want to approach issues like this as 'generally innapropriate behavior' I'm on board. If you want to correct someone by telling them, "Don't write X because to my group it means bad thing Y' I'm on board. I'm NOT on board when an article starts with a premise that cannot be altered.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
    1. Re:How long have you been a Misogynist? by valley · · Score: 1

      Ooh - I need mod points... Isn't this what happened to Dave Sim?

  109. FOSS people are degenerates anyways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carry on.

  110. This is sexism, BUT from a small group of female.. by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    ...extremists. Those who want to drive it further and further, despite having surpassed the healthy balance a long time ago and despite men AND women starting to more and more oppose them.

    It's really strange. I myself are from the post-sexism generation. I am so far out of that old twist in mind, that I have problems to even imagine why anyone would add in a sexistic way. I mean, it does not make any sense. And to me it does also not make any sense to beat that dead and long gone horse. The only sexism I ever have seen or heard of, is from two sources:

    1. Really really backwards cultures is some very religious areas of the world. (No matter what religion.)
    2. Feminazis (no offense, because I've seen them call themselves with names like that) who hate all and everything about men, because they were very mistreated by some male asshole(s).

    Whoever thinks that women would be treated bad in IT/FOSS culture, obviously has never seen how one women in a IT team can make all the men there their slaves who want to fulfill her every wish. If anything, then men would love to see more women in their teams.

    The problem is, that those feminazis think, that all women *want* to become construction and steel workers, mathematicians, programmers and physicists, etc.
    While in reality, nearly all women couldn't care less about those kinds of jobs. Sure there are exceptions, and that's nice. But exceptions prove the rule.
    I mean it's as if some extremist men would complain that we want to do more of those jobs that women like to do. But actually we don't.
    Both genders have different interests, different talents, different things they love.

    But obviously that fact would interfere with their "payback" plan. So they are actually in denial.

    The real problem is, that women still form their ideals on the base of male ideals. And see what they actually like as something weak and low. Which is understandable, because many women actually don't want to be strong all the time. They want to have some peace. Who can't comprehend that? Look at what games girls play.
    So they like a man who knows what is right and wrong, what is good and bad. It's a wonderful feeling to feel safe in that way.
    That means they intuitively buy into that male reality. Including male ideals.
    But in reality, nothing of what women like is any "lower" that what we like. Especially when we don't like it.

    I guess we should help our wives get some self-esteem for their own values. Then the whole sexism stuff will vanish from the front pages, and only in corner areas will you see the female sexist view or the male sexist view, as a natural part of the Gaussian curve.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  111. "FOSS Sexism Claims Met With Ire and Denial" by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    I see no reason to meet them with anything other than a yawn. What does he propose to do, get a Federal court order requiring affirmative action?

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  112. You know, the real issue isn't sexism... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    It's that too many people on open source projects are jerks and all too willing to jump from "your code's stupid" to "you're stupid" all too quickly. Now to allay all of the insecure ones' fears out there, not everyone working on FOSS projects are like this (and I've never been treated that way - I guess my code's OK enough). However, many FOSS project members, being geeks, well... let us simply say that "playing nice with others" has not always been high on their priority list. And it shows. You know, you can be respectful even when telling someone that their code sucks. Do that, and you'll have a lot more people, both men and women, contributing.

    --
    That is all.
  113. don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry but the whole thing seems stupid to me. Even if it's all totally true and FOSS is horribly sexist, what is anyone supposed to do about it? This isn't even an organization, it's a disparate group of organizations and companies of varying size, research departments and IT students from around the world, and primarily, individuals whose only link to those organizations is a handle they post under on a message board somewhere. The social dynamics of the kind of people that FOSS attracts (face it, largely highly intelligent, socially awkward males) produced a dynamic where sexist jokes are often made. OK, well on slashdot everyone accuses one another of being a virgin living in his parents garage, that's pretty degrading too, and it's against men specifically. If you don't like the community as it is but you really want to program in your free time start a project that attracts a different sort of person, you can sit around all day drinking green tea and talking about how vi would crush emacs if it weren't the object of male gaze or whatever you want to do. This is like the story a while back about how using master/slave architecture was racist... I just don't care.

  114. Not true, there are a lot of female developers by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 1

    but for proprietary software, not for FOSS.

    FOSS community does not provide legal protection for sexual harassment because in most cases it is a hobby/volunteer work. However, most proprietary software developers are employments, therefore have full legal protection of the labor laws.

    In the new age, it is going to be the women feeding the men.

    1. Re:Not true, there are a lot of female developers by panthrkub · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that female developers choose to write proprietary software *because* of the protection from sexual harassment that labor laws provide? That's absurd. Now, if you said they work for proprietary software companies because they want to get *paid* for their work, that would make more sense. Luckily I have the best of both worlds with my job, as I work in the FOSS industry, yet still have full benefits, and every so often will contribute something of value while getting paid for it. ;) But I know that I'm in the minority.

  115. Let's look to Shakespeare for insight by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    The boy nerds doth protest too much, methinks.

  116. Sexism? Ridiculous! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Women have an extremely important position within FOSS: horizontal.

  117. When this thread has ended ... by khasim · · Score: 1

    I'd like to see an analysis of the instances quoted.

    I'm going to predict that there will be fewer than 20 different instances quoted ... but those instances will be quoted in 50+ different posts each.

    Or, to put it in the mandatory car analogy, Chevy's are unsafe because my friend sent me this link to a page that had a comment about a page that had a video of this crash. (comment repeated 50 times by 50 different people).

    1. Re:When this thread has ended ... by Anghwyr · · Score: 1

      Noone in this thread is collecting all instances of sexism on the internet.

      A lot of people are quoting the latest, most exposed cases of sexism, which sort of seems the logical thing to do. Why quote an obscure case from 1996?

    2. Re:When this thread has ended ... by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      Because there's a big difference between anecdote and data. Cataloguing a broad range of incidents is far more meaningful than an echo chamber quacking about a single recent one.

    3. Re:When this thread has ended ... by Garganus · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see an analysis of the instances quoted.

      Ab-so-lutely. And frankly, I'll be more inclined to dive into said analysis when I can go to RTFA for its info, and not find it taking the form of a complaint--a whiny complaint containing heavy injections of prejudice in its own right, a la srlinuxx: "I accepted that's just the way men are. They've always been that way and they always would."

    4. Re:When this thread has ended ... by sg_oneill · · Score: 1

      Its fucking slashdot, not a sociology journal. Nobody is going to go and conduct a multimonth time series data set on sexist incidents, even though the article is about institutional sexism , just for a fucking one line slashdot zinger.

      This is lazy argumentation friend. You can throw it at almost any debate from any side, and stump people, because nobody is going to go to the effort just to reply to post. Its not a victory by argument, its a victory by default, and thats no victory at all.

      Worst of all, the article is not even about that, but see you'd know that if you read it right?

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
  118. I give you one alternate example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bobbit.

    OK, not killed her husband, but cut is dick off and drove a long way away to throw it out the window.

    And I've seen comments that are variations of a theme of "Right on, Sister!".

    So does that prove that there's sexism in women?

    1. Re:I give you one alternate example by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Just look at my post and Google for other sterling examples of Feminism and you'll see a LOT of sexism- and claiming it's just a pendulum swing is giving it more credit than it honestly deserves.

      Yes, there was sexist stuff in the past. Most men have actually bent over backwards to correct the real problems and many of the perceived problems- only to get more and more accusations and more and more heinous things sought for by the crowd claiming to be "Feminist".

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  119. The actual slide show by Rick+Bentley · · Score: 1
    Looks like a nice interjection of levity to me. But then again I'm an Evil White Male and responsible for all the problems in the world and couldn't possibly understand.

    CouchDB

    .

    --
    My favorite quote doesn't fit into 120 characters. Now no one will like me.
    1. Re:The actual slide show by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      It also raises the fun question - is porn inherently sexist? There was some male near-nudity there as well.

  120. This is not the way to go by Krahar · · Score: 1

    It is interesting to me that Bruce does not engage the criticism in his article other than to showcase it. Instead, it is implicit in his article that the mere fact of there being little recognition of the problem is itself damning evidence that there is a big problem. For all I know there might indeed be a huge problem, but the answer is not to vilify the people who make sexist remarks. This may make them shut up, yes, perhaps even apologize, and it will also make them resent what happened, sowing the seeds of actual resentment of women where nothing like that need have existed.

    Bruce says that it is no matter if people intend to be sexist. It is a huge difference, because when you attack people, they come to hate you (Bruce) and the horse you rode in on (women). If someone intends no slight to women, is this really the way to go? I say no. The answer is to friendly (!) and calmly (!) explain to someone why you (!) think that their behavior is a problem. What Bruce could do is to tell them that you are working to get more women into computers, and having the field feel welcoming to them, and that this person can help do that by thinking about whether what they are doing in future will offend women, and that you understand that no offense was intended. See how that will go over better?

    Somehow I think the way to get more women into this field is not to attack the men in the field on behalf of those women.

  121. I'm still an EMACS virgin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'm a male.

    "Virgin" has several meanings.

    One is "never had done this before".

    Alternatively, Noob. But then again, people don't like Noob and someone's bound to think it's just about boobs.

    PS with all these phallic symbols "proving" men are sexist, what about St Paul's? All it needs is an annexe and you have two great big breasts in London.

    Or does that just prove men are sexist too?

  122. And THAT is the REAL problem. by khasim · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Okay, let's take you're example of .01%. So, one out of every 1000 posts contains sexiest language. That's a problem in of itself.

    Yeah, good luck with that.

    Here's a newsflash for you: there are idiots in the world. Just browse at -1 right here, right now.

    What we have here is the classic "mountain out of a molehill" phenomena.

    THAT is the real problem. And THAT is why so few examples of sexism can be presented but so many examples of non-sexist comments abound.

  123. Re:I put this in the same box as the obvious eliti by PeterBrett · · Score: 1

    Instead of being friendly and helpful, spending 30 seconds giving a kind answer to help another, these people instead gladly spend 5 minutes elaborating to another how stupid they are, how wrong they are, how inefficient their idea is, how bad their way of thinking is, how wrong they are for trying to learn things the way they do, how wrong they try to solve problems and solve their task, and, in the end, that they should just "rtfm/google" or similar.

    I hang out on a variety of Freenode channels regularly, and I see an incident like that about once every three months. Nowadays, when I see people asking questions that would have yielded a detailed, step by step response if they'd typed it into Google instead of an IRC channel, the experienced people in the channel seem to go to the trouble of answering carefully even when they answer the exact same noob questions several times a day.

    And yes, I do tell people to RTFM from time to time, especially when people clearly haven't read it before asking their question. I even tell them where to find the manual, and which section they might want to look in. This is because I personally have better things to do than copy and paste sections of manuals into IRC all day. Of course, if someone has read the manual, I'm very happy to help them in more detail.

    I'm getting a definite sensation of, "I got an unhelpful response on an IRC channel once in 1998 and I'm still bitter about it," from you.

  124. The highway by Spazmania · · Score: 1

    Look, it's my way or the highway. That may be elitist. It may be insensitive. It could well be poor management. But there's nothing sexist or discriminatory about it. So get over yourselves.

    Sexist and discriminatory are words reserved for folks who because of your gender won't give you a chance to play their way.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  125. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by stdarg · · Score: 1

    it's funny how defensive guys get when their sexism is pointed out to them.

    "Begging the question" -- Have you heard of it? Most rational people get flustered when they are presented with a vociferous but illogical argument.

  126. The real problems is interest. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

    The real problem with to few women in FOSS is the same as in many other places. Girls are mostly uninterested in computers in general and the inner workings in particular. The solution isnt to fundamentally change the enviroment to be "girly" but to get more women interested in technology in general. If the interest is there things sorts themselves out. I havent ever seen a girl being welcomed with anything but open arms in my line of work (sysadmin). They are judged by their knowledge and ability, nothing more nothing less.

    To single out this as a FOSS problem is just insane since the "problem" exists in technology in general and is not confined to open source. The reason i write "problem" is that i dont see any defiances with people doing what interests them the most. Get more women interested and they will be welcomed just like anyone else jumping into FOSS, prove yourself first and then get the respect you deserve. Not the other way round.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  127. Now think of lots of cakes. by khasim · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're buying into his flawed analogy.

    This isn't about one big cake that everyone has to share.

    This is about thousands of cakes.

    Who cares if some idiot mixes other stuff in his cake? You do NOT have to eat his cake. You have your own cake.

    And that is where this discussion has problems. People keep posting about some guy who put feces in HIS cake (but not YOUR cake) and now we all have to agree that there is feces in the cakes.

    Now, look at your cake. Is there any feces in it? No? Neither is there in mine. So let's look at what percentage of cakes really have feces before decrying the problem with feces being in OUR cakes.

    And when we do that, you realize that there isn't a problem with feces in cakes. There is a problem with a few people and decisions that they make.

    And you'll want to avoid dessert with them.

  128. Together we stand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...divided we fall, we fall, we fall....

    AS if FOSS didn't have enough actual technology related issues to deal with?! Now we have to mix in sexism?! What next? Antisemitism? Xenophobia? Anything else Microsoft can use to divert us from the real problems and issues? ;-)

  129. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by bnenning · · Score: 1

    It's funny how people who are allegedly against stereotypes and bigotry have no problem condemning an entire group because of the moronic actions of a small minority.

    --
    How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  130. I want to be wanted for my body, not my mind! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And as a bloke, it doesn't happen!

    It all depends on how you define your problem!

  131. Sexism and Thick Skin by Void_Ptr · · Score: 1

    So called "sexism" in FOSS, etc., is the inevitable self perpetuating result of having mostly guys in a closed environment. When not actively working, guys talk about guy things and if you are a woman, many of the typical guy topics of conversation can make you uncomfortable. On the other hand, if a woman happens to have a thick skin, and can sling it as well as well as take it, they're bound to do quite well, have their contributions recognized, etc.

    That's the bottom line. To succeed in FOSS as a woman, you have to have a thick skin, whereas if you are a man, thick skin isn't quite as necessary. Voila, instant gender imbalance.

    I have a thick skin, and therefore I succeed. On a purely personal note, I don't have much sympathy for whiny people who can't take it, male or female. Everyone should be less sensitive to personal affronts, regardless of gender.

    --
    Friends help you move
    Good friends help you move Bodies
    1. Re:Sexism and Thick Skin by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

      To succeed in FOSS ... if you are a man, thick skin isn't quite as necessary.

      Is that even true? It seems to me that you have to have a pretty thick skin no matter who you are.

    2. Re:Sexism and Thick Skin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll need a pretty thick skin around the neck no matter who you are.

      You'll also need a pretty thick skin below the waistline if you're female.

  132. Why do you keep saying that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, if 1.5% of the FOSS developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist, what is the REAL problem that you're trying to "solve"?

    What you really need is to find out what percentage of the women and of the men feel that there is sexism in the culture. It makes a big difference if 2% of men but 80% of women think that there is. Additionally, your statement seems to be an arbitrary example about 0.1%. Please cite a source. Finally, what does the percentage of women and the percentage of comments have to do with each other? To illustrate my point: Mexico is about 1.5 % of the world population (although pick a country and play with whatever numbers you want). If the entire world makes snide, derogatory or offensive comments about Mexicans in 0.1% of their talking (all of their talking, including things like, "do you carry this type of product" and "when is the next bus coming?"), does that make it not an issue because it is not more prevalent? Or maybe there does need to be a change in the way that people are behaving.

  133. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by theelectron · · Score: 1

    Some guys get defensive because they might identify with a group (FOSS) and get labeled sexist (as above) while not exhibiting sexist behaviors. Some people consider this unjust and become offended when unjustly accused of something. Many women feel offended by sexist behaviors, just as some men feel offended by by being accused of being sexist simply by being a male and not because of any actions they have taken.

  134. Cake by McFly777 · · Score: 1

    Allow me to answer your question, with a question.

    If only 1.5% of your cake consisted of strawberries .... but fewer than 0.1% of your cake consisted of feces, what is the real problem with your cake?

    I hate to tell you this, but there are standards that allow for a certain amount of rat feces in your food. The example I remember the best was for peanut butter, but I also recall such things being discussed for grains and flour. I don't know what the value is but there is an allowed amount.

    Also, have you ever thought about what "organic" farmers use for fertilizer...

    Your mention of strawberries is interesting as I can recall several incidents of off-season strawberries, shipped from Mexico, being recalled due to the use of human excrement as fertilizer.

    So in answer to your question, yes there is an acceptable limit... even for that!

    --

    McFly777
    - - -
    "What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
  135. Nailed it by poptones · · Score: 2, Informative

    Why is feminism on dev teams even an issue? Most of this stuff is done via electronic exchanges where gender, race, or even weight or height issues can only become an issue if someone DECIDES to make it an issue. I've been doing this nonsense two decades now and I have never even considered the gender or race of the person I was communicating with unless that person had already chosen to make known their agenda.

    Feminism has a history of being anti-male, and that agenda has had GREAT detrimental influence upon this culture. From child porn laws (go back 15 years and see just how many of the warnings about those laws perverting our culture have come to pass in spades) to the way our boys (and increasingly our girls) are drugged most of the way through school simply because of their otherwise normal juvenile hormonal and brain functions, the feminist agenda has proven itself a menace to whatever society it touches.

    1. Re:Nailed it by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      I'm asking the same thing myself, honestly...

      But people keep bringing the subject up for reasons I'll avoid commenting on because while I've got a good theory on the subject, I don't have sufficient backing in facts to support the supposition in question.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  136. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

    Most people respond poorly when they are insulted with little or no proof, and their objections described as "denial." It is, among other things, condescending.

  137. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by ojustgiveitup · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You sir, are full of it.

  138. Re:Keynotes LKML posts by LordKronos · · Score: 1

    but if the leaders of a movement are sexist, the movement is sexist.

    Wait, is that how it works? So if the leaders of the movement were homosexual, then the movement would also be homosexual? If they were Latino, then the movement would be Latino? If they preferred green tea, then the movement would prefer green tea? I'm not sure how that makes any sense.

  139. I think this person is very FOSSist ! by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

    I read what was written, and I was assuming it was a man who wrote it. I thought "what a bunch of bullshit". It turns out that it was a woman who wrote it, and so what was my new thought on the subject (tempered by sexism, of course) ? What a bunch of bullshit. FOSS isn't any different from any other area of life. There are sexists, racists, philanthropists, great guys and gals, and real asshats. To think otherwise is, shall we say, fossist ?

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  140. Paranoia will destroy ya. ;) by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    People are oversensitive to a degree which is nothing short of insane, these days. I remember the unbelievable global flap that occurred in response to a couple of guys painting themselves black on Hey Hey It's Saturday last week.

    Then there was a "sex scene," in the pilot of the latest Stargate series, which could not have been less graphic. You literally don't see anything at all, and I mean anything. A woman is looking a little sweaty, is breathing heavily, and has her legs wrapped around a guy's waist. That's it. No breasts, and not even a hint of such. Nothing else either. It also wasn't on the screen for more than probably a minute, tops. I caught myself after I saw it, because I was wondering whether that was what the article I read beforehand was referring to, or whether there was going to be something else. It was literally that tame.

    Yet people were talking about how inappropriate it could potentially be, etc etc.

    So to any women (and yes, I mean any) who were offended by any of the lame things said by Mark Shuttleworth or RMS, I have a song for you to listen to. I will also laugh with contempt at any response to this from enraged lesbians telling me that I'm obviously yet another pathologically chauvanistic male, so feel free.

    If hearing Stallman talk about wanting to deflower female virgins during an Emacs speech, is the most psychologically scarring thing you've had to deal with in life, then all I can say is that you've had it a lot easier than most.

    1. Re:Paranoia will destroy ya. ;) by I_want_information · · Score: 1

      If hearing Stallman talk about wanting to deflower female virgins during an Emacs speech, is the most psychologically scarring thing you've had to deal with in life, then all I can say is that you've had it a lot easier than most.

      Wow. Talk about making the author's point. So, I am supposing that you'd be comfortable with replacing "female" with "African-American" and "deflower female virgins" with "n*ggers"?

      The point being made is less that so-and-so in the FOSS community is a jerk/exhibits questionable judgement and therefore FOSS is inherently sexist than it is that vocal members of the programming community feel that sexist and/or offensive behaviours are morally defensible.

  141. FOSS community is one large fraternity by jaywhy · · Score: 1

    The technology industry, especially the FOSS community possibly because of its skewed younger demographic, is one large fraternity with avert and subtextual sexism at its heart.

    One of course could lay the blame on internet anonymity or relegate the problem to just a small minority of actors, but you’d just be lying to yourself and ignoring the utterly pervasive sexist and fraternity like atmosphere that pervades throughout the whole FOSS community and the technology community at large. Code might be judged in open source projects by merit only, but that is as far as the egalitarian spirit goes. Not a single women in the technology industry, is judged by the wider male audience on her merits; instead it is how hot she is, or how she got her job because of her looks, or any other number of sexist judgements.

    The problem doesn’t just stop there. It's the disparaging jokes, the sexual innuendo, the frat house culture, all of which we as a community seem to except and adopt as the social norm. It is a larger transgression to disparage some meaningless technology idea or method, than to spout sexist filth.

    We have turned our community over to sexist assholes, not by any direct vote or action but by simply excepting herd-like the current social norms of the FOSS community. We really should be ashamed of ourselves.

  142. Seems like a contrived issue. MS astrosturfing? by echtertyp · · Score: 1

    This smacks of some (not all) women just wanting special perks, attention, and "the rules bend for me" type treatment. Or, could this be a nice little campaign from our friends in Redmond, to distract and delay? Per Occam's Razor, the Redmond angle is the most convincing to me. Fact is, with the nature of FOSS development, evangelism and practical application, you could be a purple alien with two heads and enjoy respect and success. Next topic please!

  143. Thank you social stereotypes by Physix · · Score: 1

    Congratulations on scratching the surface of a much bigger problem: why aren't there an equal number of women in technology careers as there are men? Typically men are more interested in electromechanical things because it's forced down our throughts from day 1. If you wonder what I'm talking about, when was the last time you saw someone buying their son a doll instead of a toy car? When daughters are born we dress them in pink and give them baby dolls to play with (or similar, I'm speaking generaly). When sons are born we dress them in blue and provide them with trucks and trains. Why? Because these fit our preconcieved images of boys and girls (read: it's not something we do conciously). These actions are also self reinforcing: the more little boys we see with planes and trains, the more we think they need planes and trains. To bring my point home, if you want to see more females in technology (both career and hobby wise) expose them to it as children and provide them with equal opportunities to explore it. My goal: to raise a daughter who's writing Android apps for the elementary school science fair.

    1. Re:Thank you social stereotypes by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      My goal: to raise a daughter who's writing Android apps for the elementary school science fair.

      Good luck with that. My goal is to raise kids that follow their own path, not something beholden to some larger agenda. Gender roles are part social, but there is a large biological component.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  144. Guess it really is true by thenextstevejobs · · Score: 1

    I wasn't sure if the OP had a point until I read the thread

    As the president of a campus Linux Users Group as well as working at a Fortune 100 for about a year, I've had a bit of experience with computer enthusiasts and their choices as well as the (my) work environment.

    Obviously there is an imbalance, and I see a lot of folks saying "OK, whatever", but this is a discussion for people who care about this sort of thing. There are other issues as well, such as, why, in California, there are so few Latinos in either of these situations I'm in?

    I'll go on to say that the issue is MUCH worse in the campus organization I've recently taken the reigns on than my workplace. Though, at my workplace I have several female coworkers, very few of these are in positions above standard "Software Engineer". At school though, we have very few girls come around. I think a lot of this could be attributed to the behaviour of the other members of the group. I think it may be more due to the "expected maturity level difference" between the two situations, ie, the relative amount of bullshit a woman would need to put up with in one situation vs. the other.

    So, this speaks to me that I need to do what I can to perhaps persuade my members to be more "professional" as this might create a less antagonizing situation. But then I'm in a bit of a catch-22 as I've got more than a few mini-Stallmans in my group who are purposefully "anti-professional", even. Somehow the "hacker ethic" fails to include, even actively excludes women with the sort of behaviour and organizations that it spawns.

    I know that bringing in more girls would actually make some of my fellow members uncomfortable. Linux is somewhat of a boys' clubhouse and while I've never seen people here treat women badly, they're not as capable, subconsciously, at making them feel welcome.

    I think the behaviour at play in the guys in my group and FOSS is a much lower-level, clan-making, different-people excluding sort of impulse that is totally backwards and unhealthy. The attitude that this "doesnt matter" is one that will only lead to increased marginalization of the community, as well as continuing to exist without some great talent that will lie dormant in the meantime. What a huge boon it might be to open source projects..

    I suspect, however, that these projects are happier to be unofficially mens only and will hopefully fade into irrelevance as maybe some of us direct our projects into less exclusive clubs. It's my hope that this is an 'old guard' sort of situation and that some new progressiveness, as it begins to encourage nerdiness in the female also will grow enough to supplant the current status quo.

    Though the world and the US and California (Prop 8??????????????????) have continued to surprise me with their ongoing bigotry, so thats probably a pipe dream. Maybe I can at least change my small part of the software world

    --
    Long live the BSD license
  145. Denying the Importance by vga_init · · Score: 1

    "...the average men who would like to deny the importance of feminist issues in FOSS."

    I'd like to defend the stance of denying the importance of feminist issues in FOSS. My point is very simple: FOSS is about software. What's important is the software. Code talks. Nobody cares if you're young, old, black, white, gay, straight, male, female, transsexual, communist, capitalist, or from the moon, and you're wrong for trying to push any of these issues to the forefront of FOSS politics. Frankly it's not anyone's business what you are; just write the code and put it out there. They won't accept you in their project? Fork it. They won't host your code? Host it yourself. If the code is good, people will use it. Projects that reject significant contributions from some group will not succeed in the end due to the natural flow of the system.

    FOSS is not a unilateral organization in which you can dictate policies of nondiscrimination and inclusiveness or preach to people about sociopolitical issues. FOSS itself is inherently inclusive and nondiscriminatory, so what is there to complain about? FOSS is a free society; associate with whom you want or don't want. Think Mark Shuttleworth is a jerkface? Use Fedora.

  146. You don't really know how sexist you are by Theovon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The biggest threats to equality are the biases that you are unaware that you have.

    I'm aware of social boundaries that I do not respect, so I find myself having to consciously avoid doing things like mixing professors with students or jocks with nerds at parties. If I had my druthers, I'd invite everyone, but different social circles do different things, and I don't want to make people uncomfortable. A lot of the time, it comes down to the fact that certain topics of discussion are not compatible with the people who don't have pertinant experiences. Men typically don't want to hear about menstruation, while the topic might come up at a party of all women. Conversely, women don't tend to want to hear about men's jock itch, but it's a common enough occurence among male athletes that the discussion might arise. A lot of nerds don't know much about sports, and a lot of jocks don't know the fine details of compiling Linux kernels, so putting them together might result in people stuggling for things to talk about that interest them all.

    All of these things stem from stereotypes. Stereotypes are sometimes completely false, like the depiction of the Irish in the US in the 19th century. But generally, there's some grain of truth, if only resulting from some people's narrow and biased experiences. It's a fact, though, that humans like to create convenient categories and generalize. People have a natural tendency to think "all blacks are..." and "all women are...", because they have observed these things in what they perceive to be a majority of encounters.

    I like to think of myself as being above these petty prejudices, but there's a danger in thinking this, because I can miss subtle biases. I grew up in a family that is clearly male-dominated. My father and I both have graduate degrees, while my mother and sister do not. When I was single, I had expressed a desire to find a partner who was my intellectual equal, but my family discouraged me, telling me that I would have a very hard time finding what I was after. Despite their bias, I ended up marrying a woman that I often think of as my intellectual superior. Still, there are a lot of subtle effects that stem from an implicit assumption that men are generally more intelligent than women, things that MUST have affected me in ways that I'm not aware of.

    I remember a Star Trek episode where Janice Lester had wanted to become a starship captain (but they were not allowed) switched bodies with Kirk. In the end, Kirk makes some comment about how she could have had as full a life as any woman. Of course, our culture has matured significantly in the last 40 years. But in some ways, many people haven't really been taught that women are equal to men; they've only been trained to parrot a politically correct thing to say. They tell themselves that in the hypothetical a woman can be as capable as a man, but they don't believe it to be very LIKELY. And of course, since no one wants to admit to others or even themselves that they feel this way, what really happens is that they judgement is affected subconsciously in a way that they can't defeat.

    Women end up being judged "statistically" (you've never met a woman who was strong in IT, so this one you're interviewing is unlikely to be good). And they're scrutinized more harshly (since you're more ready to accept that a man is smart, you're going to work harder to make damn sure that this woman is as smart, and what really happens is that you make the interview more difficult).

    I have biases. Many of those biases are unfair. But the only way I can defeat them is to admit them. Not to others, because it's not PC to ever express bias openly, but to myself so I can explore them and recognize how my thoughts might be unfair if I were to act upon them.

    So for instance, when interviewing, to avoid bias, I ask everyone the same questions. But I developed those questions partly by exploring my biases. For isntance, while I may assume that men and women have equal intelligence, I don't

    1. Re:You don't really know how sexist you are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people will ask philosophical questions that will never occur to the vast majority of people. Oh well, some things just are, you can say you're bothered by someone being offended by something you do that should have no effect on you and that's you're choice. However, by my reckoning it was also their choice to be offended in the first place.

      At some point we all have to take responsibility for our own decisions and quit blaming it on other people. Yeah some other people may have given you crap, oh well. I'm not arguing for people to accept a False Choice (in the logical fallacy sense) as a real choice, just that you have to quit saying stuff like "so and so made me do this." At some point part of you made a decision to act however you acted too, own that part of you.

      You can't always control outcomes but you can make choices and evaluate how you did.

      Also, I'm so tired of shit communication on the kinds of sexism women supposedly receive at this point I'm pretty much done listening unless they can communicate better than the original post. Frankly it's time for a male revolution, I'd like men's lives to have value, they don't right now and it's a sick condemnation of us as a species. None of the problems you want solved will be solved until this happens any way so you may want to ponder the idea at least a bit.

    2. Re:You don't really know how sexist you are by Theovon · · Score: 1

      Most guys who are "sick of the complaints" are so because they in large part don't understand them, and for the parts they don't understands, impose restrictions they don't want to be subject to. In the former case, it's failure to put in the effort to understand. In the latter, it's pure selfishness.

      I don't know if you've noticed, but some men have more success with women than others. Much of that success comes from a talent or skill at listening to women and understanding them. And those are necessary in order to treat women like human beings rather than some object to contend with.

      I really find it amusing when I think about it. Our culture pressures women to listen to men and give them what they want. So everyone's accustomed to it. Then when all of a sudden, women want the same treatment, the men are all up in arms about how unfair it is.

      Unfortunately, it's a life-long challenge for some men to loose themselves from the bonds of their own self-centeredness.

      I'll tell you something interesting. I try to do a little cleaning and stuff around the house. I keep on top of the dishes, occasionally do the lawn, maybe repair something here or there. One week, I tried really hard to keep track of what chores I did and what chores she did. Usually, when I finish some chore like loading the dish washer, I feel like i've made some great accomplishment and can rest. Well, what I found was that not only did a lot of things get dealt with around the house magically with no complaint or statement on her part, but that when she was done with one chore, she would often just move on directly to another one.

      Even a relatively feeble attempt at trying to be objective showed that no matter how burdened I felt by doing chores, she was doing more without making a peep. (Except those weeks when I totally dropped the ball, and it was plain as day to everyone that I had done nothing.)

      Another common thing I observe with women (again, culturally influenced) is that they're very tolerant, up to a point. I've seen men break up with their girlfriends after one instance where they felt she had taken advantage. By contrast, I see men (blindly) take advantage all the time, and the women just take it. But they file it away, and when the imbalance goes too far, the women EXPLODE with an avalanche of complaints. Having been blissfully unaware of what they were doing, the men are invariably taken aback, insulted, put-upon, etc. I've certainly been in that position! Fortunately, like many of my other friends who have stayed married, I've managed to be diplomatic enough to listen and taken seriously what was said and even try to learn from it and change!

  147. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by amplt1337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    the near-complete elimination of sexism and racism (which has been accomplished)

    Let me guess, you're a white male American, aged 15-35?
    You have no idea how pervasive sexism and racism still are. You don't consciously experience them, but they are there.

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  148. Whats so bad about it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The FOSS community, since it is largely voluntary in nature, should be permitted to operate without concern for government mandates about equality.

    For years the FOSS community has stood as the last bastion of hope for bigots everywhere, be they racist, sexist, or what-have-you. Its the one damn place where assholes can really have their way.

    And it should stay that way...especially since women really are inferior programmers.

  149. What do you tell a FOSS with two black eyes? by e2d2 · · Score: 1

    Nothing you haven't told her twice already.

  150. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    Feminists are people that place women over men (to the point of coming up with silly names for their gender because it has "man" in the proper name for their language, never once considering the etymology...), claiming they seek equal rights for Women. Before you accost me on that assessment, folks, just look at what the luminaries of the Modern Feminist movement have said about things...

    Most people, even many who would call themselves "feminists" would be horrified if someone said things like "All men are rapists that's all they are" or things like "As humans have a prior right to existence over dogs by virtue of being more highly evolved and having a superior consciousness, so women have a prior right to existence over men. The elimination of any male is, therefore, a righteous and good act, an act highly beneficial to women as well as an act of mercy."

    However, that's what gets said all the time by people that the Feminist crowd hold near and dear to their hearts. And the parts of that crowd that sees nothing wrong with that sort of statement or conduct along those lines are typically the ones that raise the rallying cry of "sexist" or similar in the public discourse.

    "Equalist" I believe in and stand by, as a male- when it makes sense. But only then. Anything else is going off of feelings and not facts. And while I do use my feelings as a guide, I don't let them rule me. Letting your feelings rule you tends to be a symptom of several mental illnesses that're among the more severe ones. Unfortunately, if you believe the figures they throw about these days on those illnesses, at least as many as 1 in 10 are afflicted by them.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  151. Oh the irony! *head explodes* by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    I have been abused in every way possible — being called irrelevant, a saboteur, coward, homosexual, and even a betrayer of the community.

    ...

    So... We have an anti-gay bigot calling people sexist?

    1. Re:Oh the irony! *head explodes* by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you didn't understand.

      He was saying that *other people* were accusing him of being gay. He was actually describing other people's bigotry, not his own.

  152. Re:Seems like a contrived issue. MS astrosturfing? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    Per Occam's Razor, the Redmond angle is the most convincing to me.

    No, that's due to your own paranoia. Claiming that it is anything remotely rational is not true.

    Atheists really need to stop lying to themselves. You claim to be so rational and objective, when in reality you're not at all. You're just as irrational, paranoid, and/or emotively hysterical as any of the rest of us; you just redefine what the word "rational," means at your leisure, in order to cover yourselves.

  153. Who isn't a sexist? by rocker_wannabe · · Score: 1

    According to Merriam-Webster sexism is either "prejudice or discrimination based on sex" or "behavior, conditions, or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based on sex"

    As far as the first definition, I haven't found anyone that didn't think people of their sex, male or female, wasn't superior to the other sex. I don't think there is much argument that men and women think differently and can't possibly identify with the opposite sex except in some narrow way. If you have learned to function with the abilities that come with your particular gender then your ego, in the healthy, clinical sense, will value those abilities. You can only evaluate life in the terms that you understand and can identify with so the other sex seems inferior just because they are lacking something that you, necessarily, consider valuable.

    As far as the second condition, we all cling to stereotypes to help us function. We have to start somewhere in our relationships with others and in the beginning, all we know is probably what they look like and their gender. Based on past relationships we have built up some expectations, good and bad, for each gender and have to act on that until we discover more information. It's just bad luck for the first competent female programmer you meet if you're a guy who has never met a woman who had the slightest interest in programming or was any good at it. That guy might not think it was worth his time to find out if the female was good at programming or not because the odds favor finding a guy that is good at programming.

    The whole concept of forcing people not to be sexist, or racist, or communist, or whatever "ist" they are is just not workable. People will change their overt behavior but not their belief. All it means is that people will be forced to lie to you to avoid punishment.

    It sometimes takes a long time but people need to work out for themselves that their belief system is wrong and choose to make a change. Also, if people had the maturity and guts to find the community that works for them rather than trying to fight everyone that doesn't see things their way we would have a lot fewer problems. We already have laws against actions that hurt other people. What we don't need are "thought" laws that punish people for bad thinking that hurt feelings. It's time for more people to have some faith that there is a place, somewhere, that works for them. To summarize: STOP WHINING!!!

    --
    "Meaningless!, Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless!"
  154. kitchen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are all these women doing out of the kitchen?

  155. Oh brother. by superdana · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It is quite amusing to read an entire page of comments by men who think that their gender doesn't limit their perspective on this issue. That demonstrates the very root of the problem: maleness is still the default, the essential; a woman's perspective is considered especially different from a man's but the reverse is never true. With very few exceptions, all of the comments on this article reveal an attitude that the male perspective is complete and true while the female perspective is a special subset.

    Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet, so this conversation is basically hopeless no matter what. But let me share with you some anti-feminist clichés (courtesy of jezebel.com) so we can at least get them out of the way now.
    1. Feminists can't take a joke. The problem is not that feminists can't take a joke. (We can.) The problem is that you can't take feminists seriously.
    2. Some girls like [X], so it must be okay. Men often disagree on things. Women do too. One woman's disagreement does not invalidate the opinions of every other woman.
    3. Criticizing misogyny is a waste of time. This might actually be true here.
    4. Feminists have no lives. The implication here seems to be that feminists had to have suffered some great personal disappointment. Sorry, no; I just have to endure cat calls from sleazy strangers on my walk to work, get interrupted in meetings (and then get pigeonholed as a bitch for standing up for myself), and frequently have to put up with people who are blind to their own privilege. I really, really wish that my having a life would make this all stop.

    This post will no doubt get modded down to -1 practically instantaneously. But I don't care, because this is my industry too, and until you all get it, I won't be silent.

    1. Re:Oh brother. by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      That demonstrates the very root of the problem: maleness is still the default, the essential;

      Not in my experience. There are plenty of places where guys are considered second class citizens; where some of us feel that we'd be better off, sociologically speaking, if we hadn't been born male at all. Of course, you'd view that as justice; and then you think it's exclusively us who are pathological. I've ended up fairly seriously messed up in the head, yes; but it's because of having to deal with a society that has been redesigned in the image of women like you. Maybe it hasn't happened in the specific area that you're living in, no; but that doesn't mean that it hasn't at all.

      Neither are healthy. That's what you perhaps don't get. Having a society modelled on manhating lesbians is no more healthy than having a society modelled on the views of ancient Jewish men who adamantly believed that Satan was female. Both perspectives are sick, and both mean someone ends up damaged because of them.

      Sorry, no; I just have to endure cat calls from sleazy strangers on my walk to work, get interrupted in meetings (and then get pigeonholed as a bitch for standing up for myself)

      I won't pigeonhole you as a bitch. I will, however, ask serious questions about whether or not you're afflicted with misandrony. That's not a word you hear very often, is it? Accusing us of misogyny is so much more PC.

      honk if you're queer

      Let me guess. You'll try and tell me that having this as your sig, and being a feminist, is a complete coincidence; right?

    2. Re:Oh brother. by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      It is quite amusing to read an entire page of comments by men who think that their gender doesn't limit their perspective on this issue.

      Aren't we mostly talking about things aimed at men? A group of people united entirely and only by their gender? If the way our gender impacts on our perspective isn't being taken into consideration by whoever is doing the talking, they're doing it wrong.

    3. Re:Oh brother. by melikamp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet,

      Really?? The vast majority of posters and posts here are gender-neutral. The vast majority of topics here are gender-neutral. This topic is a rare exception, it has a lot of sexist comments, and it is widely recognized as a troll (it is tagged so). You are contributing to trolling as well. Slashdot, at large, is very neutral towards any particular minority in IT, especially after you build your friend list and adjust viewing options. I hope to god you are not reading it raw.

    4. Re:Oh brother. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      You know a lot of what you perceive as sexism may be a reaction to whininess. Try acting less whiny and watch the 'sexist opposition' to you disappear (really, everyone gets interrupted in meetings. Its not sexism).

      --
      Qxe4
    5. Re:Oh brother. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1
      1. Feminists can take a joke, but are only when the butt of the joke is a man. Just look at greeting cards and television commercials. It is very hard to take seriously a group that claims to want equality, yet demands special treatment. It is very hard to take seriously a group of women who get upset over the portrayal of women in ads but have no problem with men being portrayed the same way in ads.
      2. Feminists apparently believe "Some girls, specifically us, don't like [X], so it must be completely wrong all the time with no exceptions ever, even when we are in the minority or are no even present." What is worse is that feminists are hypocrites. Feminists are against men-only anything. Let feminists hear of a men-only club, and soon you will have a protest; take, for example, the Augusta National Golf Club. Yet, they are perfectly okay with Shapes, a national chain of women-only gyms. Tell me, what would your reaction if you were told you could not join a gym because you are a woman?
      3. Criticizing of feminism by men is a waste of time because it is seen by feminists as an invitation to verbal, and sometimes physical, abuse. From what I have seen, the general response to men criticizing feminism is to call the men names and belittling their opinion.
      4. Feminists have no lives because they are so busy looking for some slight that they don't have time for a real life. You talk about cat-calls and being interrupted in meetings. Yet, I have seen and experienced feminists who don't understand that holding the door open for someone else as one enters or leaves a building is common courtesy and does not have misogynist undertones. Rather than say "Thank you", they will berate and insult a man is merely being polite. I have no doubt that the same people who interrupt you in meetings interrupt men as well. You need to stop worrying about other people's privilege and taking it away and work on increasing your own privilege through effort. And, I find it amusing when women decry the dearth of chivalric actions by men, when it was woman, specifically feminists, who killed such behavior.

      For the most part, men do not care if you work in this industry. But, we do care when take it as an insult to your gender when someone who is an ass to everyone is an ass to you. We do care when you feel that because you don't like something, no one else should be allowed to have or do that something. Stop acting like your feelings and desires override those of the men around you.

      You say you want equality, well, equality is not "My opinion overrides the opinion of the men around me because I am a woman and they are men." If you want equality act like it.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    6. Re:Oh brother. by stink_eye · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is quite amusing to read an entire page of comments by men who think that their gender doesn't limit their perspective on this issue. That demonstrates the very root of the problem: maleness is still the default, the essential; a woman's perspective is considered especially different from a man's but the reverse is never true. With very few exceptions, all of the comments on this article reveal an attitude that the male perspective is complete and true while the female perspective is a special subset.

      Typical, attack a stereotype with an equally generalized and unsupportable assertion. Because someone does that to your particular group it entitles you to to the same? I read through all the articles modded 3 and higher prior to running across yours, there where plenty of comments representing both sides of the issue.
      Unfortunately it seems to me that your statements belie just as much pig headed opinionism and hyperbole as any male chauvensists drivel.

      Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet, so this conversation is basically hopeless no matter what. But let me share with you some anti-feminist clichés (courtesy of jezebel.com) so we can at least get them out of the way now.

      Great, let's rail about how anti-feminine Slashdot is and then quote examples of that from a site that has nothing to do with Slashdot or wasn't particularly related to the article that spawned this particular thread. Tell you what, why don't you go down through this thread one more time without having your 'agenda blinders' on and show me how many chauvanist quotes there really are? And if/when you do find them why don't you show me where Slashdot actually squelched opinions relating to the matter?

      Feminists can't take a joke. The problem is not that feminists can't take a joke. (We can.) The problem is that you can't take feminists seriously.

      Generalize much?

      Some girls like [X], so it must be okay. Men often disagree on things. Women do too. One woman's disagreement does not invalidate the opinions of every other woman.

      No one here ever made such a contention. Nor was this contention made in the original article. Axe to grind?

      Criticizing misogyny is a waste of time. This might actually be true here.

      Based on your previous statements regarding your lack of a fair shake on slashdot, I take it you mean that is is a waste of time to make your argument to this particular forum? Brilliant! Because it only makes sense to proselytize to people that already agree with you! Ever hear of preaching to the choir loft?

      Feminists have no lives. The implication here seems to be that feminists had to have suffered some great personal disappointment. Sorry, no; I just have to endure cat calls from sleazy strangers on my walk to work, get interrupted in meetings (and then get pigeonholed as a bitch for standing up for myself), and frequently have to put up with people who are blind to their own privilege. I really, really wish that my having a life would make this all stop.

      Again no one has made this an issue in this forum aside from yourself. You are arguing points that have nothing to do with the thread.
      Moving along, nothing of substance to this argument, it's as generalized and hyperbolic as any chauvinist/racist statement I have ever heard made....

    7. Re:Oh brother. by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      maleness is still the default, the essential; a woman's perspective is considered especially different from a man's but the reverse is never true.

      In programming, gender should be irrelevant. If you weren't specifically talking about gender issues I wouldn't have a clue which you are. I don't look at usernames when writing replies.

      I've seen code written by both men and women and I couldn't tell who wrote a piece of code.

      Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet

      Why? I know people make stupid jokes ocassionally. I don't like them either, so I mod them down.

      But 99% of the discussion isn't like that, and stupid jokes are that, stupid, and not the main content of the site.

      Feminists can't take a joke. The problem is not that feminists can't take a joke. (We can.) The problem is that you can't take feminists seriously.

      Feminism, IMO, doesn't belong in programming. Neither does whatever word is the reverse of that, or any kind of gender issue, or anything related to where the coder was born, their appearance, genetics, non-programming related preferences and such things in general.

      Programming is about code. Who are you, what you look like, and what kind of hormones you have in your blood are irrelevant.

      Criticizing misogyny is a waste of time. This might actually be true here.

      I don't disagree the presentation was tasteless. I didn't like it either. I agree it was a very bad idea. But to attempt to extrapolate that to FOSS in general is IMO excessive (where quality of contribution is what matters), and to make it a big issue is counterproductive.

      That one project has a moron in an important position doesn't automatically say anything about the rest of them.

      Feminists have no lives.

      Two things about this. First, for the purposes of contributing to a software project, you're not a woman and I'm not a man: we're both programmers and that is gender, age and species neutral. My contributions are only more relevant than your if they're technically better.

      I just have to endure cat calls from sleazy strangers on my walk to work, get interrupted in meetings (and then get pigeonholed as a bitch for standing up for myself), and frequently have to put up with people who are blind to their own privilege. I really, really wish that my having a life would make this all stop.

      I can understand it's got to be annoying. But I've got to deal with nonsense every day as well, you know. People called me many things to my face. People also interrupted me at meetings. But I don't bring those issues to a software project; I bring my code.

    8. Re:Oh brother. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Heck - let's be fair - *I* can't take a joke either, sometime they really piss me off . . . except
          oh, yeah, I'm expected to laugh off entire movies aimed at my gender.
      I'd like to have a life too . . .
          Oh, wait, I'm posting from a 4-midnight shift I've been on for over five years, because they can trust me. I've seen women get transferred off this shift after six months, max.

      There is a sense that a lot of feminism isn't that women don't have legitimate grievances - but that everyone had legitimate grievances but suddenly it's important when it's women.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    9. Re:Oh brother. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      While I am at it, it is very hard to take seriously a group that makes up statistics about domestic violence and the Super Bowl Sunday. And, once the lie was exposed, the group has defended and justified the lie.

      And, it is hard to take seriously a group that has been complaining about the wage-gender gap when a female economist showed the gap to be, 2% when experience, education, and number of years on the job are taken into account. And, when a former head of the National Organization for Women New York City shows it is actually false. The reason men tend to make more in many professions is because men do harder and more dangerous jobs. Men are more likely to do the nastier jobs, to work later, to work overtime, work odd hours, to travel for their job, and do all the most difficult things in a job than women. Women are also more likely to choose jobs that are personally rewarding but pay less, such as working for non-profits. The reason men make more than women is because men sacrifice more of their happiness, health, and self to their jobs than women do.

      Feminists are their own worst enemy.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    10. Re:Oh brother. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you, but when you as a group go around telling people they're going to have to change because someone is offended, you're going to get a lot of flack. If Feminism stuck to the message of 'a fair chance for everybody', it'd be a whole lot more palatable than rants about sexism in the OSS community. Sure, the Debian death threats were over the top, and Ruby presentations could generally do without random naked chicks, but don't paint the whole community (communities?) with the same brush.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    11. Re:Oh brother. by t0rkm3 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you're being interrupted because the meeting has a timeline and you're filibustering.

      I interrupt people all the time if they are off point or rambling about extraneous details that should be sidebarred. I would call you nasty epithets under my breath if you jumped down my throat.

      Instead, you should the same as all of the professionals I know do when they are interrupted. Provide a brief case as to why what you have to say is important to this meeting, or apologize and get back to business.

    12. Re:Oh brother. by superdana · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Like another poster said, this is not about percentages. Watch whenever an article comes up that has any connection, however tenuous, with a woman, and immediately there will be comments--modded all the way up!--about sex. And I'm sorry, but this article is not a troll. This is a serious issue that needs to be openly discussed. Calling this article a troll is absurd, and only proves that most of Slashdot doesn't give a shit about women or women's perspectives. (I'm aware that the writer is a man.) And to claim that Slashdot is neutral? Are you fucking kidding me? This place is thick with racism and sexism.

      And no way do I read this place raw. But it doesn't seem to help.

    13. Re:Oh brother. by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1

      I know I can't comment too well on this topic, as I'm a male white guy. I'm not in any sub-group that is getting denied attention that I can think of -- other than getting beat up once for being a Nerd in third grade. Nothing but totally ignored is my only peril.

      However, I do think that if I were in a group that I thought was discriminated against, I might take the comment of a few people to represent some all of that larger group. I'd be a little more skittish -- not thinking that "hey, that's just some jerk" -- I'd identify that person as an ambassador of ill will.

      It only takes one snarky comment to ruin the reputation of the group.

      I think that people here are pretty intelligent and accepting -- but then, I'm probably part of that larger group.

      I do see racism as a problem -- but not accepting that people CAN empathize and see things from your perspective, is also a stereotype. I do find some Feminists funny and I'm not at all bothered by the group in general -- just when someone says that all males are the same -- I get no credit for having taken your side against the real misogynists. I'll try not to conclude that all Feminists feel the same way, however.

      I do notice that if you say; "I'm a feminist" that there are a lot of guys and girls who get riled up. The TERM itself has been demagogued by people who would like to cancel the Woman's Suffrage movement. As a guy who does not take it the wrong way, and loves Ellen Degenerous, I would have to admit that it's a loaded term -- for no fault of the movement or the need to stand up for ladies. Just recognize that if you lead with that LABEL -- that it has baggage that too many people just react to without giving it a lot of thought.

      I work in a place with a lot of women at every level. If someone gets the label "B!tch" it's usually just because they are nasty to be around. I suppose it all depends on if someone is actually putting you down or not. It might be that you need to lower your guard a bit and look for allies rather than opponents -- if they aren't there, it might be time to find a new place to be.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    14. Re:Oh brother. by melikamp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Watch whenever an article comes up that has any connection, however tenuous, with a woman, and immediately there will be comments--modded all the way up!--about sex.

      Are you saying that comments about sex are intrinsically offensive to women?

      Seriously though, as others pointed out, this topic is a troll, since no meaningful statistics were offered to show that FOSS community is hostile, insensitive, or unwelcoming to women. Are you saying that every message board or discussion forum where a troll gets through is sexist? Do you believe that women will suddenly start joining FOSS in droves if we reduce the number of sex jokes in kernel development from something like 0.1% to 0.01%? Would it help if we introduced 0.1% of posts that are offensive to men somehow?

      Consider this for a moment: if women were just as willing to code as men, would we not have small FOSS projects led by women? FOSS is not a private club. You are a part of the community the moment you license your code under GPL or any other free license. Where are these two-or-three people projects done by women who were ostracized from the community of misogynistic jerks TFA painted? Where are Feminists forks? One pissed off woman coder would be more than able to fork or at least re-brand even a major project if she was offended by the sexism.

      This shows, IMHO, that there is no significant sexism in FOSS development. Whatever little there is, it cannot be the major factor responsible for the near-exclusion of women. Other factors must be in play here, and we should figure out what they are and how we can improve the situation. Rather than solving this very real problem, TFA hand-picked a few trolls and declared the whole community to be anti-woman. By this logic, the mere presence of GNAA posts make Slashdot a racist forum and IT a racist field all around the world.

      And to claim that Slashdot is neutral? Are you fucking kidding me? This place is thick with racism and sexism.

      It is also thick with feminism and other great values. I, personally, think that all ethics discussed here are mainly discussed by trolls, and very little of what you guys and gals say about sexism has to do with technology or just plain common sense. In that respect, it is a very neutral forum indeed. You know I am right: you see opposite viewpoints modded up to the wazoo right next to each other all the time.

    15. Re:Oh brother. by kaidadragonfly · · Score: 1

      I've considered leaving Slashdot because it is not very female friendly, and I am definitely not reading it raw.

      It's not as bad as some places, but days like today I start to feel it's not really worth it.

    16. Re:Oh brother. by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I've considered leaving Slashdot because it is not very female friendly,

      I feel for you especially after this topic, but I would like to point out that Slashdot is not very people-friendly, because it is at times very juvenile. There is a fair chance that one will be ridiculed here for being a conservative, a liberal, a Vista user, a vi user, a perl user, a facebook user, a virgin, a facial hair enthusiast, a teen, a bad speller, a manager... Did you really expect to make a clean getaway as a feminist?

    17. Re:Oh brother. by kaidadragonfly · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your response. I know there are some good people here, but seeing so many sexist comments upmodded is a little depressing.

      I mostly lurk anyway, so if I leave you guys won't have lost too much. ;-)

    18. Re:Oh brother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [quote]Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet[/quote] Troll

    19. Re:Oh brother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot is one of the least female-friendly places on the Internet,

      Never been on 4chan, I take it?

    20. Re:Oh brother. by revengebomber · · Score: 1

      Feminists can't take a joke. The problem is not that feminists can't take a joke. (We can.) The problem is that you can't take feminists seriously.

      I don't quite follow your logic. I don't see anything outright wrong with your claims here, but they don't seem to fit coherently. It's hard not to sound like a troll saying this, but, "what?"

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    21. Re:Oh brother. by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      A common bullying tactic (not limited to the sex divide) is to mock the everliving shit out of your target, then, when they become upset, claim that they're 'taking it wrong,' are 'too sensitive,' or 'can't take a joke.'

      So, when somebody says something, in this context, sexist and demeaning, and a member of the target sex rebuts or takes offense, they're written off as being, well, 'too sensitive' or 'unable to take a joke.' As if laughing while saying something hurtful makes it OK.

      Remember, sticks and stone may break your bones, but words will scar you for life.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  156. Get's you thinking... by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    It makes me think that the equal employment opportunity laws are likely hampering the US economy by encouraging women to work in fields in which they are not particularly interested or show particular aptitude.

    But hey, it's not like rational analysis of statistical facts has anything to do with flag-waving issues such as these, or even the US economy for that matter.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  157. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by pezpunk · · Score: 1

    haha, except it certainly looks like a near-unanimous majority who would rather attack the person who brought the issue up in the first place, insisting that she is incompetent, gay, crazy, and all the other names she correctly predicted she would be called.

    --
    i could live a little longer in this prison
  158. Actually, if you really want some sexism... by petrus4 · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...to be hysterically offended about, here's a bit more.

    Answer me honestly, girls. Was there a single one of you, who was upset by Shuttleworth's or RMS' comments, who was actually straight?

    Nobody ever says it, but I've seen the truth on a fairly first hand basis. Feminism genuinely isn't the domain of heterosexuals, largely speaking.

    Accusations of chauvanism can also very legitimately go both ways.

  159. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by DdJ · · Score: 1

    You are providing an example of one thing the author talks about:

    people who are not consciously sexist themselves tend to be unable to see institutionalized sexism around them

    Is it possible to have a sexist environment even when no individual in that environment is the least bit sexist? Yes, it is.

    Let's imagine, let's pretend using a deliberately contrived and perhaps almost cartoonish example, that for the moment that there's some biologically-driven difference between men and women in the way they make arguments related to dominance or leadership. That, due to biology, due to evolution, men are more willing to be confrontational when jockeying for management or leadership positions than women are. Let's say that given a particular hostile confrontational result, a man is more likely to intensify competition, and a women is more likely to remove herself from the arena. Now let's say you've got some sort of communication medium that hides gender, and limits social feedback and social cues.

    What's going to happen? Who's going to end up in charge? Is the result sexist? Does the answer change even if we know that none of the participating individuals have any sexist thoughts? If the result is sexist, can anything be done about it? (No, saying "well, women just need to man up and deal" will not get you bonus points.)

    Now, just imagine that the difference isn't nearly as clear-cut, and isn't even close to universal, and imagine that we do not know if the behavioral difference that allows this to perpetuate comes from biology or is taught by society in some way.

  160. Re:reports of ire and denial met with ire and deni by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's amazing how defensive people get when their character is being assassinated.

    Let me try a parable here.

    Suppose you're a nice person, an upstanding member of the community. Maybe you even work in some altruistic job to help at-risk kids learn to read.

    Now I come along and accuse you of being a child molester. I then say "and of course every child molester is going to deny it - they don't want to go to jail. And we all know that our society has a problem with child molestation." Yet I offer no evidence of any act committed by you, simply the fact that some people in society, at some points in time, have molested children.

    Would you not feel defensive at the accusation? Would you not deny it?

    Would you not worry that some people might start to treat you as suspect?

    Would you not try to understand why a total stranger would be accusing you of something so horrible?

    It seems to me you would do all of these things. It seems to me you would be fairly justified in thinking that your accuser is unhinged or has an agenda.

    While accusations of sexism are not as serious as accusations of pedophilia, smears have consequences and people care about their reputation. When others start slinging mud, they're going to get upset.

    Why should the "uniform and predictable" response of the unfairly accused be so "astonishing" to you?

  161. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you!

    Women lacking the right to vote? Big f*ing problem. Glad that's been fixed! If I had been alive back then, I like to think that I would have fought to correct that wrong.
    Putting "s/he" instead of "he" in use case documentation? I just can't get that worked up about it.

  162. École Polytechnique massacre ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the first one I clicked (because the title seemed somewhat non-FOSS-related)

    École Polytechnique massacre

    In 1989, a man killed 14 women and injured 14 others at an engineering school in Montreal, Quebec. Only women were targetted; many people consider that the shooting was an anti-feminist act.

    do you really see this as an example of sexism amongst FOSS crowd

  163. I disagree with this, so mod me down. by Lendrick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your generalization utterly fails to take into account the fact that there are plenty of whiny douchebag men out there who want nothing but recognition and approval. You also fail to take into account the fact that there are many women out there who are quite capable of standing on their own in the face of adversity. Take medicine, for example. Medical residents are probably one of the most mentally abused groups of people out there. They are frequently disapproved of (and called incompetent, among other things) by their superiors, and somehow a lot of women still make it through and become doctors. In that case, though, the abuse is doled out pretty much equally between the sexes.

    I don't find the mere mention of pornography to be sexist -- however, if female developers can't work with a group without being constantly hit on, asked on dates, flirted with, or otherwise weirded out, you can't really expect them to stick around. They're liable to go somewhere where they're treated with equal respect, and I can't blame them.

    1. Re:I disagree with this, so mod me down. by steelfood · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your generalization utterly fails to take into account the fact that there are plenty of whiny douchebag men out there who want nothing but recognition and approval. You also fail to take into account the fact that there are many women out there who are quite capable of standing on their own in the face of adversity.

      And your statement more or less proves his point. When women stop being whiny, they're just as, if not more capable than men. And likewise, men who spend all day whining about how unfair life is will get nowhere.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    2. Re:I disagree with this, so mod me down. by Lendrick · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My statement doesn't prove his point at all. I was stating that there are plenty of demanding fields where women do just fine, which don't have the ridiculous gender gap that the FOSS community does. While I would agree with you that whiny people tend not to get very far, I would disagree with the assertion that this is a predominantly female trait. Things wouldn't magically improve if women in FOSS "just stopped whining," because that's not the problem. The *problem* is that they don't receive the same treatment.

      Furthermore, if you treat women the same as you treat men, then you're not part of the problem; in this case, I would suggest that you become part of the solution by standing up to this sort of crap when you see it, rather than denying that it happens.

  164. Push for equality, not feminism by DigitalCrackPipe · · Score: 1

    I took a feminist stance in public
    That is probably the problem. Equality should be the aim point, not pursuit of a feminist agenda. Sexism swings both ways, feminism is BAD for women when it degrades into male-bashing and turns people off of the idea of promoting equality.

  165. statistics are not the whole story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's say that 99 times you walk down the street to the convenience store to get something to eat. Then the 100th time, some guy you've never seen before threatens you. You might consider NOT going that way again, even though 99% of the time there was no problem.

    If something happens that makes a person feel unwelcome, and that specific incident is not addressed, then it doesn't necessarily matter that there is a mailing list full of a thousand or a million perfectly unoffensive posts.

    While I agree that people are better off not getting upset about random crap seen on the intertubes, and the allegation of sexism in FOSS may have little to support it, I don't feel that pointing out the large volume of unoffensive discussion diminishes the actual problems.

  166. FYI, just one persom claims FOSS sexism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here name is Carla Schroder, blogger/editor for sites like LinuxToday and LinuxPlanet. She's been blaring a trumpet about every slight she thinks is directed at her sex for some five years now. I don't hear it from any other women.

    Not saying that Carla is wrong or right, I'd just like to point out: if you respond to Carla criticizing anything from her endorsement of her friend's fund-raising/advertising campaign to correcting a bad regular expression in her shell script, suddenly there's this big sex issue you have dropped on your head.

  167. Sexism in industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both the relatively high industry female-to-male ratio and relatively low FOSS ratio may be explained by sexism in industry. Companies currently actively hire women over men in the tech industry. They offer higher pay and tolerate greater incompetence in an effort to avoid expensive accusations of sexism.

    When there are well-paying full-time options in industry there's less incentive to consider starting or contributing to FOSS projects.

    FOSS is the closest to meritocracy that currently exists. The projects are more distributed (less face time) and more open (anyone who wants to work can) than anything that may be found in industry. The distribution in FOSS is probably much more closely aligned with current actual male/female tendencies.

    If we don't think we've made enough useless noise yet, maybe we could cry some about the horrible sexism in ballet classes.

  168. Odd, or typical, that you fail to get it completel by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You defend MikeeUSA's feelings by saying he has come to his extremist views from years of being exposed to extreme views.

    So, how come that you cannot come to the same conclusion in reverse? That those women you quote (often out of context) have come to their view from the decades, centuries even millenia of extremist views women have endured?

    Extremism grows best when opposed by extremist.

    All men are rapist. It was once the law that a woman had to obey her husband without question. Submit to him regardless of her own wishes. How do you define rape else then forcing sex against someones will?

    The marriage comment. Since we now regonize the right of a person to refuse sex even within marriage and that a woman is no longer the property of the husband, traditional marriage has indeed been abolished. It has been replaced by an entirely different version with competly different laws, just using the same name. The old was destroyed to make place for a new better more equal version.

    To kill an infant. We do this all the time, the west owns it wealth and health to the fact that women no longer drop a new kid every year. It allows for very long, expensive education and a high concentration of best food and medical care, rather then waste it on a dozen kids, most who will die because they do not get the resources they need. Why do you think Africa does so poorly? Everytime they do a bit better, they get an explosion of new people who they can't feed or educate. Birth control IS the answer. Her proposal should be seen as a way to shake things up, overkill to get people thinking about just what it means for a family that has no control over the number of children.

    to decontaminate the planet. Again, an extreem suggestion but the counter result of the extreem in which baby girls in china are killed because they are not valued.

    We, western white males, all to easily forget just how extreem hatred can get. Watch a holocaust documentary and remember, this ain't all that long ago. Women only got the vote recently, only had the right to own property recently.

    While a lot has changed, this has changed because people werewilling to talk extremist. Once, a woman who talked about the right to vote, could go to jail for this terrible crime.

    You defend MikeeUSA for his extremist views, but deny the same excuse for the other side.

    That is all to common sadly, but to give you a clear example of how one-sided this is. You would send a woman who kicked her rapist to jail for kicking him in the balls afterwards.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  169. This is why you look like loonies... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
    ...you can't post a comment like "how do I compile a driver", and assume that comment is either sexist or not sexist, it's completely unrelated to gender at all.

    A comment that is completely unrelated to gender CANNOT BE SEXIST. It does not in any way, shape, or form "discriminate against or degrade any person based on sex", nor does it show any "prejudice based on sex". Therefore, any rational person can believe that such a comment is NON-SEXIST. Period. It is only a loon that could look at a statement that has no mention of gender of any kind and think "gee, is that statement sexist"? "Is there some hidden sexual connotations that show prejudice or discriminiation"?

    Every time a loon makes such a ridiculous statement, they attach themselves to legitimate problems and cause people to think "they're all loonies". Put 83 loonies all out for a good time, drinking and mooning passersby onto a bus headed for a political demonstration, and the public will quite rightfully start to connect "loony" with whatever that political orientation is. In the meantime, every person the loons accuse of being sexist will react, naturally, with denial and ire, because they truly are not sexist and are appalled at being accused of such. The loons, of course, will use this denial as proof.

    ...you need to take the total number of comments as the total number of comments that have anything at all to do with gender.

    That's patently baloney. Every person who is intelligent enough to know that sex has nothing to do with FOSS will tend not to NOT post messages to FOSS mailing lists that make gratuitous references to sex, either positive or negative. NON-sexist participants will, by definition, not make many, if any, statements based on sex; it is only those who have some notion that sex is relevant that will comment in such a way. You are, then, by definition, self-selecting the members of your "poll" to have sexist tendencies, and thus dishonestly biasing the results. You will be using one person to prove that the entire movement is sexist, which is pretty clearly what is happening here. Stallman and someone else I've never heard of have made awful comments with the words "girls" in them, thus we are all sexist. I call "bullshit".

    1. Re:This is why you look like loonies... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstood what I meant. I understand what you mean by my example not being sexist, it's not (or non-sexist, however you want to phrase it). But my point was that it's ridiculous to look at a set of comments where it's simply a bunch of anonymous people talking about things that don't have anything to do with gender and then using those comments as proof that they are not sexist. You can only decide whether or not the commentors (NOT comments!) are sexist if they are discussing things where gender is an issue. An example of this would be a question like 'what tools are appropriate for a 16-year-old girl to use to help learn programming.' When someone is prompted with that question they are immediately aware that gender is an issue and they may or may not take that into consideration in their response, but they're aware that gender is an issue.

      You can see differing treatment towards women in several places, including right here. I'm not sure who some of the more prominent female posters here are, but ask someone like girlintraining or one of the others how many troll or flamebait responses they get just because they identify themselves as female. Sometimes they get denigrated, sometimes they get special attention (which is still sexism), most often they get treated like everyone else.

      It seems to me that analyzing comments in the LKML looking for sexism is about as useful as looking through the WebMD forums for people interested in cars. Yeah, there might be those people there, but you can't look at all of the posts on WebMD that don't have anything to do with cars and then assume that no one who posts on WebMD is interested in cars. It's just not the right venue to identify that relationship.

      Also, before you want to continue to remotely diagnose whatever conditions I may or may not have, or postulate about my political or religious or whatever other ideals, keep in mind that my original post was calling into question this statement:

      1.5% of the FOSS developers are women, and only 0.1% of the comments are sexist

      Aside from the mistake I've already pointed out, I'll also point out that the author was trying to compare the percentage of people with the percentage of posts. Those are not related. If you've got 100 people in the group, and one of them posts 1 sexist message, and the other 99 people post a total of 1000 messages, it's not correct to say that 0.1% of people are sexist. 1% are sexist, but they don't post as often. The OP tried to compare the percentage of women with the percentage of all posts to LKML that are sexist, and that's a B.S. comparison.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    2. Re:This is why you look like loonies... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Congratulations, you just played the "change the statement" game, but you got caught. You said:

      This isn't just about statistics - many of the comments that are posted are completely non-sexual in nature, you can't post a comment like "how do I compile a driver", and assume that comment is either sexist or not sexist, it's completely unrelated to gender at all.

      That, and every other reference in your paragraph, were to "comments". Now, however, you say:

      But my point was that it's ridiculous to look at a set of comments where it's simply a bunch of anonymous people talking about things that don't have anything to do with gender and then using those comments as proof that they are not sexist. You can only decide whether or not the commentors (NOT comments!) are sexist if they are discussing things where gender is an issue.

      Now you claim you were talking about the commentors, not the comments. Yes, change the object of your sentence and the meaning does change.

      You can see differing treatment towards women in several places, including right here.

      No, I can't, because I have no idea who the women are and who the men are. I rarely look at the handle being used by a poster, and those rare times I do are because I want to make sure I'm quoting and replying to the right person. So, sorry, Charlie, I don't see different treatment towards women here. I see what people say, then I see what those people CLAIM they said, and then what they say they WANTED to say, and how other people respond to them, but my ability to assign gender to comments is zero.

      I'm not sure who some of the more prominent female posters here are, but ask someone like girlintraining or one of the others how many troll or flamebait responses they get just because they identify themselves as female.

      I suggest that even those who identify as female don't know how many responses are based on their gender and how many are based on their comments. It's easy to claim "he said something I don't like because I'm a girl", but unless the response actually says why it is being said they don't know.

      It seems to me that analyzing comments in the LKML looking for sexism is about as useful as looking through the WebMD forums for people interested in cars.

      Ok, you've made the requisite assinine car analogy, you can stop now. Analyzing comments in the LKML for sexism is quite relevant when the issue is ... sexism in FOSS.

    3. Re:This is why you look like loonies... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      I suggest that even those who identify as female don't know how many responses are based on their gender and how many are based on their comments. It's easy to claim "he said something I don't like because I'm a girl", but unless the response actually says why it is being said they don't know.

      Maybe so, but comments like "show us your tits" aren't very ambiguous.

      Ok, you've made the requisite assinine car analogy, you can stop now. Analyzing comments in the LKML for sexism is quite relevant when the issue is ... sexism in FOSS.

      Any other analogy would have fit. The point is that you can't assume that sexism is not present in the FOSS world simply by counting the number of sexist comments and comparing that with the percentage of female developers.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  170. Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lock all the sexists and feminists in a room together until they either fuck each other or kill each other.

  171. Hello World by FunkyELF · · Score: 1

    #!/usr/bin/env python

    acceptable = ("m", "f")
    x = None

    while x not in acceptable:
            x = raw_input("Are you male or female? [%s]? " % ', '.join(acceptable))

    if x == 'f':
            print "Sorry, you cannot use this program... you're dumb"
            exit(1)

    # ... rest of program ...

    print 'hello world'

  172. This is why FOSS survives. by PhasmatisApparatus · · Score: 1

    I can't come out of the woodwork every time FOSS is targeted by trolls, but every once in awhile I have to make an exception. FOSS is like a reverse-idiocracy. Those who are easily swayed by popular opinion will undoubtedly leave FOSS for more PR-competent grounds (Microsoft, etc.). Those of us who evaluate software on it's merits, instead of the failings of the spokespersons for that software, will continue to use FOSS and reap the benefits.
    But let's get back to developers. If you are angered by the sexism displayed by certain members of the FOSS community, you will most likely be reluctant to contribute to the projects represented by those individuals. Thus, any public outcry against those individuals should be welcomed, but sadly most of the outcry is Microsoft FUD in disguise, which is not aimed at the individuals, but the FOSS movement as a whole.

  173. Re:Keynotes LKML posts by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

    I would hope that much of the FOSS community thinking Stallman is on crack by now.

    --
    I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  174. Re:Keynotes LKML posts by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

    So if the leaders of the movement were homosexual, then the movement would also be homosexual?

    Now you understand why Boy Scouts can't have gay leaders

    --
    I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  175. Extreme examples, and an agenda by syousef · · Score: 1

    Oh please. Stallman is a nut job. Have you met the man? If you don't understand that perpetuating a joke like "The Church of EMACS" means he's completely out of touch and on his own little planet, you have your own problems.

    There's bound to be some sexism in Open Source. Just as there is bound to be rascism. Just as there are bound to be mentally unstable people. Blowing any of these out of proportion to push an agenda is dishonest and quite frankly vile as you're basically exploiting the mentally unstable and socially maladjusted.

    I have no problem with women in software development, open source or otherwise, and I do feel they deserve to be respected which means making them uncomfortable with sexist jokes and porn references is out. However I do have a problem with some women who call themselves "feminists" who's true agenda is ironically the oppression of men.

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  176. Pardon my Pun, it Smells Like m$,3 Days in the Sun by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    There's only one company that could benefit from this topic, and the predictable outcome of this thread causes no life. I cannot help but wonder how many are laughing at this thread in Redmond, and what other "delightful surprises" they are conjuring up using this thread as a medium for growth.

  177. And you think women WANT this? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Racism/Sexism exists in the KKK type, sure, that is easy.

    It is a bit different when you are for instance a jew and that has become a curse word. Oh, not openly but near constantly. You can keep quiet, (don't ask, don't tell) which is often then considered a show it ain't a problem at all.

    Don't show you are different and you can just ignore it all and be happy.

    But it is a very complex subject. We don't want to be an 'ism ourselves. Oh, you use the word gay NOT to describe someone happy or someone who likes members of the same sex, but something that you don't like. But you don't think all homosexuals should be castraded then killed, so you are okay and not a homophobe at all.

    The real problem is that we are racist and sexist and it is VERY hard to honestly look at how our own behavior affects someone else.

    Even if you attempt to compensate, that often can have a bad effect as well. And in these case death often occurs by a thousand cuts. It is not your slightly condecending remark, it is years and years of it.

    And it ain't even always the opposite side who does it. How many comments would you as a guy get from your male friends if you became a nurse? How many comments to do you think a girl gets who goes into IT? Pushed away by one side, pulled by another, it takes a LOT to remain standing.

    The real problem, is that it ain't just one problem. There is no easy fix. But that doesn't mean we can sit back and say "oh this is just the way it is".

    So, take a long hard look at yourself. Have you ever thought when a woman asked for some help with a computer, "oh, god. no doubt she wanted to install barbie playhouse and put the CD in the wrong side up"? Then you are part of the problem and fixing it... well it is as hard as fixing the notion that men can't change a babies diaper. Harmless? Wait till you are fighting for custody for your kids from your wife who has a history of passing out drunk to the world. Then you will know how deadly sexism can be.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  178. Don't call yourself a feminist by syousef · · Score: 1

    I've got a better suggestion for you. Stop calling yourself a feminist. The term itself is sexist. It implies that you are putting women's issues and needs ahead of men's. It also associates you with some extreme man hating and man bashing. Women who truly want equality need to place themselves under a different banner.

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  179. When political correctness are removed... by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    ...this is what's left.

    http://www.womynkind.org/scum.htm

    To a couple of the women I've seen replying to this thread, the views expressed in the above link are completely fine, no doubt. Completely acceptable.

    That's justice, you see. It's perfectly ok for women to express the sort of sickness in the above link, and yet supposedly, women are more compassionate.

    Women can express the above; and yet war is the exclusive domain of men alone. Women aren't capable of hate. They're not capable of savagery. They're not capable of vindictiveness. They're certainly not capable of violence.

    That's all just us guys, solely.

  180. totally agree by Aurisor · · Score: 1

    Best damn post in the whole thread.

  181. This sort of accusation sounds suspiciously... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    ... like a conspiracy theory. And like most conspiracy theories, if you don't agree with the premise, then you have clearly been brainwashed by the propoganda put forward by those behind the conspiracy.

    I'm pretty sure it qualifies as a form of logical fallacy, although I can't think of what name it would most properly be known as.

  182. It's about community by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    "There is a flip-side, though, that the original poster may have neglected to consider. F/L/OSS developers ARE amongst the brightest and the best, but they also have extraordinarily high levels of autistic behaviours, anti-social disorders, emotional instability and alienation."

    I think that is a much more likely explanation than attributing the low numbers of woman in foss with sexism. Not so much because of a 1 on 1 interaction where an anti-social male said something inappropriate to a female code contributor, but because a group of anti-social/autistic people are far less likely to form any sort of community.

    A group of people working together on something isn't 'community' in its true sense. As foss coding is very much a hobby for most people, I would imagine that a woman would be more interested in participating in a hobby that has a sense of community.

    Look at the numbers of women mmorpg players versus the numbers of say.. women counter-strike players. The game with the most community tends to have the most women. The same could be said of the coding game.

  183. Trade you. by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1, Insightful

    To paraphrase: keep that political bullshit out of here. Code. Or don't.

    Well, if men were equally expected to keep all their men's locker room bullshit out of it, and just "code or don't," then that would be a fair deal. As it stands, women are expected to keep their "political bullshit" out of there while the men don't face any consequences for treating them like shit.

    1. Re:Trade you. by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I've never been involved in a project where "mens locker room bullshit" has ever come up, much less been central to forward progress on any project. I'm sure I have no interest in any of it, whatever it really means. Ignore it and code, or don't and be put off by anyone who thinks or works differently than you. You're not getting paid to do this, so if you don't enjoy it, don't do it.

    2. Re:Trade you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You're not getting paid to do this, so if you don't enjoy it, don't do it.

      Indeed. So instead of getting cool features made by a talented woman programmer for your favorite unfairly-overlooked tool, she takes up knitting. (All open source, volunteer based projects that have too much of programmer time, please send me a note, I'll happily try to poach some of your surplus.)

      And all this because no one could manage a "speak for yourself, dude. I don't agree with you." when someone is putting out the "females don't belong here" sign again.

    3. Re:Trade you. by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      No, approach this rationally. Your objective is to get one or more cool features. You are the victim of an offensive statement by someone who matters on the project (such as the owner/maintainer). He is running a FOSS project because he wants community support and new features, but he's offending you and compelling you to leave.

      - He's competent and capable believes in your feature but doesn't like you. Chances are, he'll get the feature done. You get what you really want and don't have to use your time here.
      - He's competent and capable, but doesn't believe in your feature. You fork his design, others will follow you if they believe in your feature, if not your fork dies. You get what you really want.
      - He's incompetent and thriving on the work of others. You fork his design and run your own show. You get what you want.
      - No one is interested in your feature, you don't believe in it enough to fork. You move on. You don't get what you want, but you don't waste a lot of time in so doing.

      That's how to be grown up about it. Don't expect anyone to ride in to save you because someone called you a bad name. Cliques, politics, developer poaching, drama... this is going to turn off people who might agree with you, but who fundamentally are there to get a tool they need, not be part of a community they don't. This isn't a democracy, it's a collective. It works by contribution and common interests. Do anything to hurt one or the other, and it falls apart and that is annoying to everyone. It's great when everyone gets along, but it isn't essential as a number of projects have shown.

      Code or don't, but don't pollute the environment with politics.

  184. I'm not following that. by khasim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm not going to argue with the idea that only 0.1% of comments in the FOSS movement are sexist, because you're probably right: the vast majority of interaction and discussion in the FOSS is not sexist.

    So far, so good.

    What I think you're overlooking, however, is that there isn't a threshold for sexism. Sexism is an issue of perception, not of percentages.

    No. I cannot agree with that. Perceptions can be wrong. Perceptions are OFTEN wrong.

    For example, simply because we have female politicians doesn't mean that politics isn't also a sexist field.

    And if 90% of the politicians were female, would it still be a "sexist field"?

    It seems that you have the two items backwards. A field where the "vast majority" is not sexist is not the same as a "sexist field" where there are a few females.

    But it also tells me that members of the FOSS movement will be reluctant to apologize for their mistakes, and that can become a deal-breaker.

    Follow that with ...

    I don't shun or reject friends, family, coworkers, whomever, simply because they carelessly said something hurtful or offensive. But if they A) don't acknowledge what they said is problematic and B) refuse to apologize, I eventually will decide to remove myself from situations where I have to interact with them.

    Who is "them" in this case?

    I post on /. and I have been called all kinds of names for my opinions. So? That's life on the Internet. You can avoid it or you can recognize that there will always be idiots in the world.

    If 9,999 people on a FOSS project are not sexist ... but 1 person is ... how does that 1 person contaminate the other 9,999?

    1. Re:I'm not following that. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Thanks for replying. I'll try to clarify where I'm coming from. I said...

      What I think you're overlooking, however, is that there isn't a threshold for sexism. Sexism is an issue of perception, not of percentages.

      And you replied...

      No. I cannot agree with that. Perceptions can be wrong. Perceptions are OFTEN wrong.

      Well, yes and no. Perceptions can be, and often are, wrong. I agree with you there. But I don't agree that there is a percentage threshold for sexism, or that there's a litmus test to determine when a group is (whatever)ist. I guess what I'm saying is that offense is in the eye of the beholder. As I said in another comment, the fact that most (all?) of the examples of FOSS sexism weren't intended to be sexist and offensive doesn't make them not sexist and offensive. It certainly changes how the people saying them should be viewed, but it doesn't simply excuse their actions.

      It seems that you have the two items backwards. A field where the "vast majority" is not sexist is not the same as a "sexist field" where there are a few females.

      You're right, I was vague. Let me try to rephrase what I meant.

      I'm coming from the perspective that if a certain group makes me feel consistently uncomfortable or offended as a woman (and not simply like they're all jerks to everyone), that group is going to be perceived by me to be sexist.

      The way I'm describing it, you're right: a few bad apples can definitely spoil my subjective perception of the whole bunch. But, if that perspective is wrong, I'd hope that the group would reject the views of the ones who actually were sexist, rather than saying, "Nope, no sexism here, don't know what you're talking about." That's what seems to be happening in this discussion, which is why I (perhaps prematurely) was indicating that the FOSS movement felt, to me, to be generally sexist as a whole. Not that every individual was sexist, or even the majority, but that the vibe I'm getting isn't willing to acknowledge sexism.

      I said...

      I don't shun or reject friends, family, coworkers, whomever, simply because they carelessly said something hurtful or offensive. But if they A) don't acknowledge what they said is problematic and B) refuse to apologize, I eventually will decide to remove myself from situations where I have to interact with them.

      And you replied...

      Who is "them" in this case?

      "Them" is the individuals and, in a group situation, the group as a whole. That's what the issue ultimately seems to be in this discussion. That people from the FOSS movement were making sexist remarks and didn't apologize, and then the FOSS movement - defined subjectively as people who seem to care about FOSS stuff enough to comment on this issue - also don't seem to acknowledge the sexism that was/is occurring.

      post on /. and I have been called all kinds of names for my opinions. So? That's life on the Internet. You can avoid it or you can recognize that there will always be idiots in the world.

      Except these weren't simply comments on the Internet, they were leaders on the FOSS community making public statements. And, as I said in another comment, simply because people are jerks doesn't mean that we shouldn't call them out on their bullshit when it happens.

      If 9,999 people on a FOSS project are not sexist ... but 1 person is ... how does that 1 person contaminate the other 9,999?

      When the other 9,999 don't acknowledge or reject the sexism of the 1.

      -Trillian

    2. Re:I'm not following that. by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      If 9,999 people on a FOSS project are not sexist ... but 1 person is ... how does that 1 person contaminate the other 9,999? When the other 9,999 don't acknowledge or reject the sexism of the 1.

      Half of the problems with the feminist movement are the extremists that call absolutely everything sexist.. because of that people are desensitized when someone calls something sexist, only concrete examples which people can analyze for themselves as sexist will prove to them that it actually went on.

      Sex is irrelevent in the oss world, I mean hell, if you hadn't of mentioned it, I wouldn't have even known you were a woman. People are judged by their merits and by the merits of their code. Harsh quality standards mean even the best of us get patches rejected fairly frequently.

      I've seen women that consider that just being a male, makes you a 'rapist' and were concerned when they had a baby boy that one day they would be one, just because they were male. Does every female have to acknowledge the sexism of that? not really I trust the rest of them are mostly more sane.

      When someone wrongs you, the best thing is to present evidence and your argument to people in that specific instance, just calling it without that makes people skeptical.

    3. Re:I'm not following that. by scribblej · · Score: 1

      So, if 9,999 people are Atheist, and one is Christian, they automatically become Christian if they do not "acknowledge" or make it clear that they have "rejected" the Christianity of the 1 person?

    4. Re:I'm not following that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When the other 9,999 don't acknowledge or reject the sexism of the 1."

      Communism and Fascism is not overly widespread in the FOSS community.

      The relatively few people who obviously
      are mental cripples are widely ignored - Politely so.
      They are not given attention.
      They are simply a non issue among NERDs :-)
      NERDs tend to be Conservative and Libertarian.

      If you would like to kick the butt of someone,
      then please feel free to do so.
      Don't expect someone else to do it for you.
      This is not the U.S. Army.

    5. Re:I'm not following that. by garote · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. The point was about how the community is perceived BY OUTSIDERS.
      In your analogy, it's like 10,000 people living in an apartment building, and 1 person putting a big banner across the front door saying "THIS IS A CHRISTIANS-ONLY FACILITY", without the objection of the other 9,999.
      What do you think passerby will conclude?

    6. Re:I'm not following that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If 9,999 people on a FOSS project are not sexist ... but 1 person is ... how does that 1 person contaminate the other 9,999?

      When the other 9,999 don't acknowledge or reject the sexism of the 1.

      We just want to code.

    7. Re:I'm not following that. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      If you percieve the whole groups sexist because of one person you gonna have a very hard life ahead of you, because I can hardly think of a single professional group from catholic nuns to nuclear physisists who don't have that 1 sexist person. I also don't like your idea of collective punishement pushed to the whole group, FS develoeprs are not a state, an ethnic group or a registered professional organisation and noone really speaks for all of us.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    8. Re:I'm not following that. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      If you percieve the whole groups sexist because of one person you gonna have a very hard life ahead of you, because I can hardly think of a single professional group from catholic nuns to nuclear physisists who don't have that 1 sexist person.

      As I said, the issue isn't when there is a single sexist (racist, whateverist) person in a group. Rather, it's when the rest of the group doesn't make clear that - as a whole - they don't tolerate that type of behavior.

    9. Re:I'm not following that. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      Half of the problems with the feminist movement are the extremists that call absolutely everything sexist..

      I actually agree with you here, that extremists (often second-wave feminists) have given the feminist movement as a whole a bad name by overusing the cry of "Sexism!" It sounds like we'd probably disagree on where it should be used, but I don't - in general - disagree that it's used too much.

      ...because of that people are desensitized when someone calls something sexist, only concrete examples which people can analyze for themselves as sexist will prove to them that it actually went on.

      I wish I could agree with you there, but (as I said elsewhere in this thread) sexism/racism/____ism, and offense in general, is in the eye of the beholder. I guess I'm not sure how to find a middle ground between the desire for "concrete examples which people can analyze for themselves" and incidents that feel ______ist to the person on the receiving end, even if the one committing it doesn't agree.

      -Trillian

    10. Re:I'm not following that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess what I'm saying is that offense is in the eye of the beholder. As I said in another comment, the fact that most (all?) of the examples of FOSS sexism weren't intended to be sexist and offensive doesn't make them not sexist and offensive.

      Actually, you're partially correct and partially flat-out wrong with the above statement.

      Being sexist is something the sender does. If someone says something (anything) and does not intend it to be sexist, it is not sexist. (It may be crude, crass, or poorly phrased, but without the intent to be sexist, it is not sexist.)

      Taking offense is something the recipient does. People can be offended by a statement regardless of the speaker's intent.

      Let's play with an example. Let's say someone tells you they're surprised by how well you cook. If they're surprised because you're male and they think only women can cook, it's a sexist statement. If they're surprised because your friends rag on your cooking all the time, it's not. Regardless of the speakers intent, you could choose to take offense, or not, for whatever reason suits you.

    11. Re:I'm not following that. by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      What whole group? This was about a ruby conference? I may be part of OSS, or not (I use OSS a lot, but don't code, but do participate in the community to some extent), but I'd forgotten about ruby entirely till this post. The idea that
      a) there's a FOSS monolithic group
      b) this group somehow knows what happens within each subgroup around the entire planet
      seems ludicrous. It's the same thought process that thinks the Internet is actually on entity. I expect that, say, the Linux kernel developers, or the IBM linux devs or the ReactOS people don't any more feel they're part of the same "group" as the Ruby people than US citizens feel they're part of the same group as Chinese citizens. Sure, we're all human, and part of the huge group "people", but we don't watch every thing that happens anywhere in the world and feel like each citizen, or even a majority, needs to know about it or call it out.

      I feel more like an outsider looking at the ruby conference thinking "WTH?". But if you say FOSS community, you include me (by some definitions).

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
  185. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Toonol · · Score: 1

    So you say. I disagree. Racism and sexism have been purged from our laws; every corporation has policies against them; and they are unanimously condemned as wrong. Racism and sexism are solely the province of the lunatic fringe... which can NEVER be eliminated.

    Give proof that racism is widespread in the US today.

  186. ...sigh... by gedrin · · Score: 1

    Please remove your identity politics from my software.

    --
    Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
  187. Re:Many in IT hate irrationality, which sexismism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only ugly women are capable of raping men.

  188. Re:I put this in the same box as the obvious eliti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your case doesn't make his/her impossible, and vice versa. that's a very contrasted "black or white" view you portray.

    i personally hang out in #openbsd, #linux, #macdev, as well as 3-4 other channels of popular, large projects, and i see exactly what he or she speaks about, on a frequent basis as opposed to your observation. in #linux in particular i've been a visitor the past 4 years, spending much of my time "picking up" the people who go there to most often just get slagged down on for asking "stupid questions" as they try to learn.

    i spend those 30 seconds helping them, instead of those 5 minutes not helping, described by the original poster. does it yield good results? yes, it does, for both parties, but then again i've never had problems relating to other people in social ways.

  189. Oh enough with the righteous patronizing tone by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    F/OSS is the meritocracy par excellence. No diploma is required, your nationality does not matter, your actual name doesn't have to show up, looks do not matter -- hell you don't even have to show your face! --, even mental health does not matter either considering the number of functional autists in computing.

    You just have to show your code. A minimal level of English helps but is by no means required.

    That's it. There's no peer pressure unless you yourself make it an issue.

    Contrast this with what minorities still have to face in the work place in many countries. I'm talking real discrimination, real racism. I've seen it here against Arabs, where very competent people get passed on for jobs where Europeans with the exact same qualifications are given the priority. Women? There isn't any* in computing, and none is being passed for a job. They don't have it hard; they're not even trying! It's a fact!

    Which brings me to my point; people who want to find internal (to the F/OSS and tech at large community) causes for the poor number of women will always have to make shit up. They will come up with some inane+insane notion that women are intimidated by the attitude of computer people or some shit. Right. When was the last time you heard of a hazing in IT? Yet that's the kind of shit you used to find in newly feminized professions such as police.

    Usually they end up asking that women be treated specially to make it easier for them ... which is utterly and ironically sexist in itself.

    --
    (*) obviously there are exceptions but the striking thing is how few those exceptions are. I'd wager there are more women truck drivers or other typically male professions than women programmers.

    1. Re:Oh enough with the righteous patronizing tone by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      I agree with your assertion that FOSS development is fundamentally a meritocracy. Those who produce good code are respected, and even so, from time to time they all have to put up with a lot of crap/hazing regardless of their gender.

      However, if I understand correctly, you are saying there are few, if any, women in software development. In my experience, this is simply not true. I regularly work with female software developers in the US, China, India, and Germany.

      Where I am, I haven't seen discrimination against women that prevents them from being hired, though I suppose it is very likely to happen in some places.

      This article about research on the subject of women in computing fields is interesting.

    2. Re:Oh enough with the righteous patronizing tone by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      "When was the last time you heard of a hazing in IT?"

      I recall hearing many stories of people snapshotting a desktop, making it the background and then removing the icons. And then justify it as teaching employees a lesson about locking workstations when not in use. I last heard this specific form of prank discussed on Slashdot perhaps a month ago.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

  190. Wait a minute by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    women's participation in FOSS development is over seventeen times lower than it is in proprietary software development.

    Wait a minute... women's participation in GEEK DATING is over seventeen times lower than it is in regular-men dating... so does that mean that geeks refuse dating women?

    okay, that analogy is a bit exaggerated. I think everyone has SOME prejudice - I heard from a psychologist once, that we adapt the prejudices from our parents. I guess smart people are sooner prepared to abandon them and I guess that FOSS programmers don't care much about who wrote the code, they care more about the quality of the code... okay, they'll double-check the code for backdoors if it came from a muslim... or a chinese... or a russian... or an eastern european... or an african... or a frenchman...

    well anyways - as someone who tutored some computer-science courses, it is my impression, that most women don't enjoy programming that much... they do what is neccessary to pass the exam, but none of the ones in my classes ever swept the board. Most of them don't seem to have the passion for it, so it makes sense to me, that they don't program on their leisure time...

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  191. Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear god, why are there so many comments on this issue? I have never even so much as THOUGHT about FOSS possibly being sexist in the slightest way, yet apparently it is some kind of big deal. If women want to join the FOSS community, fine, I have no problem with that, if they don't, fine, I have no problem with that either. But honestly it doesn't seem like a big deal to me at all, it's not like FOSS is advertising against women or degrading them, so what is the problem/complaint here? Another thing to the guy that posted about images of scantily-clad women in slideshows or something like that. You will see these everywhere in the world, don't be offended by them, and certainly don't accuse anyone else of being sexist simply for posting/viewing them. I could understand if a FOSS website had an image on their website that depicted RMS stuffing dollar bills into a female developer's shirt. Yes, that would be sexist. Whatever the hell you're talking about isn't sexist, and it's degrading and belittling the severity of the term.

    1. Re:Anonymous by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      Yes, that would be sexist. Whatever the hell you're talking about isn't sexist

      You clearly didn't read TFA. He said some _bad_ things:
      "A release is an amazing thing; Im not talking about the happy ending.."
      "Your printer, and your moms printer, and your grandmas printer"
      "well have less trouble explaining to girls what we actually do"

    2. Re:Anonymous by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      The third one is bad, yes. I don't understand the female reference in the first one, if there even is one.

      The second one is stereotyping, but I've got to ask; if that only mentioned your printer, and your father's printer, and your grandfather's printer...would that then draw fire as well, for only talking about guys' printers? ;)

    3. Re:Anonymous by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      If it was 'your father's printer...' it'd draw fire for blatantly implying that only men would have printers.

      The third one I don't see as being that bad, really. I see it as being less derogatory towards women and more towards geeks. But maybe I'm just trying to explain it to the wrong women...

      (I've also not found any context yet)

  192. The thing about FOSS is... by renfrow · · Score: 1

    it's not like a game where they can take their ball home, and there's no game. You can make your OWN ball... If you can't get into a FOSS project because they object to 'cooties', then think up your OWN project. AND let them in even with THEIR 'cooties'. Heck CLONE their project and run it the way you see fit. Whoever you are.

    Tom.

  193. Problem Solved... by Follier · · Score: 1

    More than anything, work gets in the way of coding fer FOSS. Chick's should dominate the field... oh well, blame the feminists. There would no longer be issue if women just stayed in the home, taking care of the kids and working on that next open source port of mahjong.


    You're Welcome....

  194. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

    - Among other incidents, at the school with the largest number of African-American students in the Ivy League, nooses and racial epithets have been anonymously scattered around professors' offices.

    - Differential prosecution and punishment of drug offenses and other minor nonviolent offenses (with black men incarcerated at eight times the rate of white men).

    - Black Americans were specifically targeted to receive sub-prime loans, even when they could have qualified for prime-rate loans, with a differential result that probably pushed a lot of African American families into losing their homes. (another on higher rates: here.)

    - The USAF considers it still necessary to actively recruit minorities into the officer corps, which is over 80% white.

    I could go on, but I've done enough research for you so far. Similar results can be found for differential treatment of other minorities, as well as women (who are actually a slim majority, but still the disempowered group).

    Note that these are mostly instances of institutionalized racism or sexism -- where there is officially no difference on the law books or in the policies, but organizations still have cultures that privilege whiteness and maleness, and corresponding values and attitudes, above women and people of color. This is the kind of racism and sexism that is alive and well today, but is all the more insidious, because most of us white males are trained not to be even remotely aware of its existence, or (when confronted with it) to brush it off as isolated incidents, a few bad apples, etc. The biggest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist, as they say.

    Also, this is all without getting into stereotypical portrayals in the media. For instance, when was the last time you saw a movie with an Asian American hero who didn't either (1) know kung fu or (2) flail helplessly in the clutches of his own geekery? When have you seen an Asian American love interest? (Outside of Harold & Kumar, which was explicitly intended as a corrective to that attitude in media portrayals). Have you ever noticed that if there's a black character in an action movie, he's almost certainly one of the first to die, and nearly guaranteed to be dead by the end? (c.f. Battlestar Galactica, with plenty of other instances easily discoverable). I won't go on, but these sorts of cases have a powerful effect on society's perception of people of color, and on PoC's perceptions of themselves, too.

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  195. Oh for fuck's sake this is the internet by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    Anyone and his dog can post anything, anywhere, saying whatever, no matter how offensive.

    So you're easily offended? By proxy?

    Well I find your generalizations and judgementalism offensive, way more offensive than any retarded sexist joke NOBODY GIVES A FUCK ABOUT

    And btw no real example of such outrageously sexist behavior is given, especially not in any kind of statistical significance. That porn-themed presentation? I chuckled at the first few slides, then found it embarassing. But sexist? Give me a fucking break! This is so ridiculous it makes me want to cockpunch someone.

  196. MikeeUSA? Really? REALLY? REALLY? by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    Do you know who he is?

    Among other things he designs (usually very nice) maps for Nexuiz. On European servers his maps have a disclaimer added at the beginning to the effect that he is a fascist douchebag and that his maps may contain offensive material.

    I've never witnessed such material in game, but it picked my curiosity and I looked him up; that guy is GONE. Very, very far gone.

    In other news I know that really crazy woman, and therefore French women are psychos.

    Generalizations ... always wrong.

  197. psychological vs. physical bullying by mi · · Score: 1

    The bullying is usually more psychological (as opposed to male physical bullying) but has comparable impacts on the victims.

    I really don't believe, a psychological bullying — unless, maybe, done by a well-trained psychologist (such as a professional interrogator) — can have an impact comparable to physical beating. I'm sure it sucks, but it is not anywhere close, if only because in the case of beating the psychological impact is huge too, but it goes on top of the physical pain.

    One is called "loser" and other names, is robbed of the lunch money, and then beaten up...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  198. An old saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This reminds me of an old saying: "If you put an idiot and a genius in a room together for an hour, they will both come out thinking the other is an idiot."

    Well, Bryce Byfield, I can say for certain that you're no genius.

  199. seriöst by emj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think you have a lot to learn about feminism, it seems like you have bought in to the whole FUD against feminists. We all hate zealots they are everywhere, e.g. you can't counter "hey lets not make sexist jokes" with "but they say we are rapist" it's not in the same ballpark. Kom igen läs på.

  200. Troll Really? by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

    Hmmm, I don't understand why this post was modded Troll. I guess it has to do with it being tossed up by AC, but it doesn't seem particularly inflammatory or abusive. I mean, it's an opinion not based on fact, sure, so maybe an offtopic mod is in order, but troll, really?

    Ah well, just another day on slashdot I spose...

  201. Not for me by emj · · Score: 1

    Feminism stands for almost everything good that has happened for equality between the sexes. It's you who decides to interpret it like it's a bad thing, rewriting history.

  202. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by stdarg · · Score: 1

    Note that these are mostly instances of institutionalized racism or sexism

    You would have to prove that those examples were intended to discriminate against blacks to claim that they are institutional racism.

    Well, there are two ideas on what institutional racism is. One is that any disparity that shouldn't exist and isn't a product of individual racism is a product of institutional racism. The other says that institutional racism is simply a codification of racist views that is then practiced by a group. By the second definition, in your example of subprime loans, you would have to show that Wells Fargo made it a policy to give blacks subprime loans *in order to* screw over blacks, not merely to make a bigger profit themselves.

    Maybe you were going for the first definition. I think that definition is worthless because it's merely a way for people to gloss over real problems and blame someone else. Why does group X commit more murders than group Y? Well, I don't know, let's not think about it -- we'll just blame society. It's institutional racism man! The disparity exists and it *shouldn't*! No thanks, too much like religion for me.

  203. Everybody knows you're a dog, by westlake · · Score: 1

    on the internet nobody knows you're a dog.

    This myth has been debunked so many times on Slashdot I can't even begin to count the number.

    But this search link is suggestive:

    site: yro:slashdot.org Internet profiling

    It can be almost trivially easy to build a profile - age, sex, sexual preferences, employment, education - based on resources accessible to anyone on the net.

  204. The data is almost *too* strong. by pugugly · · Score: 1

    I went back and read the article and it' s predecessor, and indeed thought the faq he pointed to was interesting but . . .I think I have a certain degree of issue with the underlying assumption that the lack of a reasonable distribution implies sexism.

    1.5% *is* disturbing if it is the result of sexism. But . . .

    I don't have the records of what truly sexist percentages were in various industries - but my vague anecdotal recollections were that they were as low as 10% et al in the 80's

    1.5% seems to me to be *too* strong a bias to be explained primarily by sexism. It may be a contributing factor, but without knowing what it's contributing to, it does very little good to be concerned about any sexism because trying to measure that effect without a proper understanding of the underlying primary effect may be like trying to measure which leg of a table is off in the midst of a magnitude 6 earthquake.

    There may be a number of explanations, ranging from it turning out that *yes* only a certain type of woman is being taught the secret handshake, to it simply turning out that working on code for no pay isn't something women like to do. But the article seems to be begging the question by asserting only one explanation without any definitive support for it.

    Pug

    --
    An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
  205. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was born and raised in Atlanta. You are completely and utterly full of shit.

  206. And that is the difference. by khasim · · Score: 1

    But I don't agree that there is a percentage threshold for sexism, or that there's a litmus test to determine when a group is (whatever)ist.

    Again, if politics was dominated (90%) by women, how could it be "sexist" (and I'm not talking about sexist against males)?

    I guess what I'm saying is that offense is in the eye of the beholder.

    And that is the core problem.

    There will ALWAYS be someone who is "sensitive" enough to be offended by SOMETHING. Why should that person be the determining factor for discussions?

    The way I'm describing it, you're right: a few bad apples can definitely spoil my subjective perception of the whole bunch.

    And because we are talking about the sexist behaviour of males, that is socially acceptable.

    But if you were talking about your perceptions of the criminal behaviour of black men based upon your observation of one incident regarding one black man ... that would NOT be socially acceptable. You would be ostracized for your "racism".

    Even though, in both cases we are discussing your perceptions about a group based upon observed behaviour of a tiny segment of that group.

    And THAT is why I will always prefer statistics over perceptions/opinions.

    That people from the FOSS movement were making sexist remarks and didn't apologize, and then the FOSS movement - defined subjectively as people who seem to care about FOSS stuff enough to comment on this issue - also don't seem to acknowledge the sexism that was/is occurring.

    No. In the identified instances, the behaviour was clearly identified as sexist.

    The difference is the opinion on whether the behaviour of those people contaminate me.

    Like I keep saying. Read this forum at -1. You'll see all kinds of offensive comments. You'll also see that they're mod'ed down. Now just because I post on these forums does NOT mean that I share the opinions of the people who posted those comments. Nor am I responsible for their existence.

    Except these weren't simply comments on the Internet, they were leaders on the FOSS community making public statements.

    And I'm going to bet that you were not personally present when any of those comments were made.

    And, as I said in another comment, simply because people are jerks doesn't mean that we shouldn't call them out on their bullshit when it happens.

    Read the comments. No one is saying that those comments were NOT sexist. Almost everyone is saying that they WERE sexist.

    So that part of your complaint is invalidated. The sexist nature of those comments has been acknowledged.

    The point being that those comments are extremely rare.

    Which is why those same comments are brought up again and again and again.

    When the other 9,999 don't acknowledge or reject the sexism of the 1.

    And again, read the comments. Those FEW instances have been identified as sexist by most people on this forum.

    You can continue to focus on them or you can move on. But your complaint that they have not been acknowledged as sexist is invalid.

    1. Re:And that is the difference. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      It could still be sexist if, on any issue that hasn't got to do with women's issues, the male politicians were consulted first or exclusively - a woman campaigning on matters of economics and diplomacy usually will have a hell of a time getting the slightest bit of attention paid to anything BUT her "women's issues" stuff in the media. And that attitude of going to the men first happens in a lot of female dominated academic fields already.

    2. Re:And that is the difference. by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      Again, if politics was dominated (90%) by women, how could it be "sexist" (and I'm not talking about sexist against males)?

      I don't understand how this analogy is useful, because that's not the situation (in politics or FOSS). I'm not trying to be obtuse, and I would love to hear about what I'm not seeing, I just know I'm missing something.

      There will ALWAYS be someone who is "sensitive" enough to be offended by SOMETHING. Why should that person be the determining factor for discussions?

      You're right, there needs to be a middle ground between, at one extreme, always catering to the most sensitive and, at the other, never acknowledging any wrongdoing. I'm simply arguing that this discussion is tilting more toward the later end than the former, particularly since it's not just a single person pointing out a problem.

      But if you were talking about your perceptions of the criminal behaviour of black men based upon your observation of one incident regarding one black man ... that would NOT be socially acceptable. You would be ostracized for your "racism".

      You're right, and it took me a few minutes to figure out why this situation is different. (Beyond simply saying "But it feels different!") With the black community, to continue with your example, there are very public figures and a very significant segment of the community standing up and saying, "Yes, this is a serious issue. But we don't accept that stereotype, we don't agree with the behavior, and we're ultimately better than it." With this discussion of sexism, the response to accusations of wrongdoing is, "Nope. That isn't actually an issue. You're making a mountain out of a molehill."

      And THAT is why I will always prefer statistics over perceptions/opinions.

      I actually agree, I prefer statistics. But that doesn't mean I base my emotions on the pure, objective percentage or duration of catcalls directed at me, or the scientifict proportion of women I see in politics. Statistics are useful and important, yes, but I think it's unrealistic to call for all judgment of human behavior to become an exercise in mathematical functions.

      Read the comments. No one is saying that those comments were NOT sexist. Almost everyone is saying that they WERE sexist.

      I haven't run the percentages, but I didn't see anything close to an overwhelming agreement that the comments were sexist. It may be that I'm just wrong (I'm rereading much of this discussion right now), in which case I'm sorry that I made snap judgment.

      -Trillian

  207. equality is multilateral by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here are the typical fallacies used by feminists to justify their gender-based entitlement:

    1. because an occupation has a large male/female ratio does not mean it's due to discrimination. Most women aren't excited enough about computing for the same reasons most men aren't excited enough about nursing to do it for a living. That doesn't mean that men are cyborgs and women are softies. It is simply a matter of general temperament. This is OKAY no matter what the activists say. In 99% of these cases, people have self-selected careers based on their temperaments. Men think, women feel. Is that really a shocker?

    2. men make more than women. Perhaps, but they also take a disproportionate percentage of the dangerous work. They are also expected to work longer hours on average than women. While women have been 'liberated', the same old stereotypical expectations for men havent' changed: put up, shut up, don't complain, and take it in silence. It's the macho way, and when men see women getting special treatment, it breeds resentment.

    3. men tend to have more power in an organization. While true, it comes with sacrifices, usually in free time, stress load, and a general feeling of entrapment. Do some men abuse it? Sure, just like some women do. Again, this is largely due to psychology. If you'll note, the women who do make it up the ladders end up being the strong, steely types. This is due to a confluence of power, expectation, and responsibility. It is NOT simply men holding women back.

    4. A litany of hypocrisies: If a man tells a 'dirty' joke at work, it's automatic 'harrassment' but if she tells the joke, it's 'empowerment.' It's ok for women to initiate flirting at work, but if men do it, it's 'harassment' if she finds him unattractive. It's ok for women to hit men, but not the other way around. Men are expected to hold doors for women. Men are expected to pay for dates. In each of these cases, women are being taught that it's ok to be irresponsible, narcissistic and childish. It's no wonder that this has bred a counter-culture of distrust in organizations where men have the largest pwoerbase.

    Women have prejudice too and it shapes the expectations for men. Right now, we have a mix of 12 century chivalry and 21st century female entitlement/victimhood. Which rules apply depends upon the whims of the woman in question so, either way, the man usually ends up with the short stick. We have a whole generation of female prima donnas running around, expecting men to wait on them like royalty, and a generation of men who think they have to kowtow to their every whim and curtail their own natures. We call them 'gentlemen.' The net result of this societal manipulation is that we're breeding a generation of men who are constantly being told they're wrong to be what they are, while telling women they're not responsible for anything. This weakens society because the traditional man, who picked up most of the slack, is becoming pussified while the woman who should be picking it up, isn't.

    This shit is everywhere. Turn on the tv, watch a few commercials or sitcoms, and you'll see that the only remaining stereotype that still takes a beating is the white, straight male. It's the last 'safe' stereotype. In high school health class, we tell the males 'it takes two,' while we tell the females that pregnancy = victimhood. 'It takes two' becomes 'it's all HIS fault' in courtrooms and talk shows everywhere. Apparently, society still expects men to provide women with a safety net when they're pregnant even though she had 50% of the responsibility for jumping into bed in the first place. He gets no say while she gets to wallow in her emotional whims concerning the baby. Of course, when she decides to have the baby, his wallet becomes hers. Equality this is not. It is no better than if men had the right to use women as incubators.

    Personally, I don't give a shit if some commercial uses stereotypes to sell a product. I just think this activism has sensitized society too much. Men even more so.

  208. feminism = sexism by joocemann · · Score: 1

    How can you be a feminist that is against sexism? That doesn't make any sense. Sexism is an ideology that favors one sex in over another. Feminism is an ideology that places a specific sex (female) over another; it is a word for a specific mode of sexism.

    This whole topic is ridiculous. I'm reminded of the racism that some people call 'reverse racsim' (lol, as if it is any different) where blacks label themselves (or cars, etc) "Black Pride", latinos "Latin Pride" and natives "Native/Indian Pride". It is silly to think that a minority, subject to racial oppression from a majority, would serve to promote equality by embracing racism. All this really does is give oppressive racist majorities more reason to maintain racist beliefs.

    If we stop acknowledging irrational differences of sex and race, we may *actually* begin to achieve equality. I find it funny that my race and sex actually matter when applying for schools and jobs in a country that is supposed to embrace equality. What does inequal treatment based on race do to achieve equality? Nothing; it takes us away from equality.

  209. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by joocemann · · Score: 1

    I know! All this 'black pride' and prevalence of organizaions that specifically serve to benefit those of specific races (like the NAACP) are maintaining racial preference (racism) like crazy!

    The day we stop acknowledging race and sex is the day we will find equality. Feminism is sexism that favors women; and so it is sexism just like chauvenism is and does NOTHING to promote equality.

  210. Let me see them by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    As I said there are exceptions. Very rare ones.

    And you might just find more women in developing countries, because I believe that given a number of career choice, women don't choose IT.

    1. Re:Let me see them by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Then that would make you an idiot - we find also this kind of thing in Sweden and Thailand (one of the tigers), I would also note that Germany is not a developping country but one of the main powers of the world, and what do we find behind this - oh, right, cultures where rampant machismo doesn't assume that poor weak women can't deal with advanced math, or at least not on the scale of most of the world.

    2. Re:Let me see them by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      I see no evidence anywhere that there are more women in IT in Germany than in neighbouring countries.

  211. Stick to meritocracy by hessian · · Score: 1

    Make sure you promote the best and demote or keep static the rest.

    Don't look at race, gender, creed, etc. just make sure that your system is fair.

    That way, the competent rise, and you don't promote those who are incompetent AND ALSO from a protected group.

    You both avoid discrimination, and anti-discrimination that ends up being revenge against the majority.

  212. WTF ? by smoker2 · · Score: 1

    Over 690 comments at time of writing. Yet the dire state of SSL gets about 200 comments. Are there any geeks left on this site ? Who gives a flying oriental fuck about "the state of sexism in the united states" or even elsewhere. I have no problem with women, most people I know have no problem with women. People are people. So explain the fuss ? Somebody needs a platform ? Don't waste my time !

  213. Don't make a mountain out of molehill. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Mark didn't say the equivalent of Nigger. He didn't say, "When I want to talk to B*tches" or "When I want to talk to C*nts".

    He said, "When I want to talk to girls". Why is girls offensive? Women call women girls all the time. "You go girl", "girl's night out", "my girlfriends". Similarly men are called boys all the time. "boys will be boys", "let's hear it for the boy", "boy's night out", "her boyfriend". It's a term of endearment. Of course, he could have just fully qualified every word and said "When I wish to speak to women whom I'm attracted and wish to know better, most of these women of whom I'm attracted because I'm heterosexual -- not that there is anything wrong with being gay -- are not in technology and thus could not be expected to know anything about compiling kernels, coding in Python, and all the billions of details in packaging an operating system. So I have a hard time explaining the intricate detail of my work."

    He'd have to increase the length of his talk by an order of magnitude, however and the audience would be asleep through a death by qualification. People don't talk this way for a reason. Colloquialisms exist. Deal with it.

  214. So something I don't think I understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Women are complaining about the FOSS community being sexist towards them. Is that because ALL MEN in the FOSS community are sexist against ALL WOMEN, or is it just that women notice more when only a few men are sexist towards them?

    I've been working rather extensively with a woman regarding Userbase (a wiki for KDE), and quite frankly I've treated her exactly like I've treated anyone else I've communicated and worked with towards a project. Does she notice that I'm NOT being racist, or is it more noticeable when someone else IS racist? Is she going to blame me for when that other person has been racist?

    That's awfully what most of this argument is starting to sound like. The whole thing stinks to me.

  215. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by psydeshow · · Score: 1

    Let me guess, you're a white male American, aged 15-35?

    You have no idea how pervasive sexism and racism still are. You don't consciously experience them, but they are there.

    You can't blame us. Nobody ever tells us that the US is still racist and sexist. Folks think it was all fixed in the 60s, but it takes generations to wipe those memes out.

    I wish we could get past the denial and anger phase, and skip straight to the "reverse racism" complaints.

  216. I suggest a little experiment by access.name · · Score: 1

    To all slashdot (male) commenters, I suggest they do a little experiment. Create a new (female) online identity, clearly female by the mail address and displayed name. Then start contributing to a project, or start discussing in a forum. Try to see the differences in how are you treated.

    I suspect there are lots of women using male nicknames or neutral emails for this reason.

    1. Re:I suggest a little experiment by tickticktickfast · · Score: 0

      This will highlight the fact that some men involved in the FOSS movement are sexist and it will make some men have greater empathy for the sexist treatment of women. On the other hand it doesn't need highlighting for those who give a crap in the first place and sexism has nothing to do with FOSS in the second place. In any case I'm okay with watching the FOSS movement disassemble itself over an unrelated political issue. Beats watching football or golf.

  217. So... by sean.peters · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I understand this correctly, the only thing you could possibly believe is what you've witnessed yourself. In other words, you believe that your own personal anecdotes are data.

    1. Re:So... by lgw · · Score: 1

      As I said, I'm skeptical even of my own personal anecdotes. Here's the first thing any engineer needs to learn out of school: the vendor is a lying bastard. The spec is just a piece of paper. All claims of performance and tolerance are lies. Believe only what you measure, and be skeptical that your measurement is representative. Certainly don't believe other's claims that they've "found the problem". Oh, sure, maybe they've found a problem, maybe.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:So... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      Only thing?

      My personal anecdotes and observations ARE data.

      They're not the ONLY data, and not the definitive truth.

      Why ignore parts of all data in Human definition, when Human observation and learning have resulted in the sets of data we consider the most factual or positive, today?

    3. Re:So... by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      I like the response to your post referring to it as Satanism.

      Let's look back at some lack of engineering double-checks, and/or other observations from the past. I see some jet aircraft failing and killing all onboard, I see viruses released in food and people getting very ill and some dying from it, I see "medical misadventures," not to quote George Carlin...

      Not checking what you consider to be fact doesn't just save time, it introduces potential missed failure points and possible harm to people and property.

      That's Satanism? Ooookay... I'm lost. Psh.

  218. concerning the .1% by I+am+a+pipe+bomb! · · Score: 1

    Even if the seemingly off the hip percent of one tenth is an accurate measure, one would have to read it in context of other off-topic conversations, as I'm sure degrading a sex or gender is not project related. How often does a conversation include political references? Attacks on unrelated attributes? I don't frequently participate in these discussions, but I'm guessing it might contribute to a tenth of conversation (hopefully a very liberal estimate). So, that only moves the trivially small to 1 in 100. But now consider authorship. Is it the case where one or two guys saying a sexist thing with some frequency is polluting our imaginary stat up to .1%, or is the case most guys inject random sexism without being particularly aware of it? The later would indicate a culture unaware of the oppression it perpetuates. This is the concern of the article's author. And, if it is the case, it would obviously implicate more community members. As such, the frequency of the comments is irrelevant as long as a significant number of the guys communicating have at least one sexist exchange without, as has been emphasized, regret or apology. That is, one sexist post without apology from a significant number is enough to build a hostile environment. In this way, whether it is .1% or 10% of the conversation, a large percent of those communicating have reviled themselves to be in line with the hegemonic discourse of western sexism. Also, juxtaposing this .1% to the very small number of women is a confusing argument against the problem of sexism in FOSS communities. Would one not infer that if there were more women the .1% sexist comments would be higher. And, is the low number of women participants not evidence that the community is in some way hostile to their participation?

  219. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

    - The USAF considers it still necessary [74.125.93.132] to actively recruit minorities into the officer corps, which is over 80% white.

    So what? An officer corp that's 80% white in a country that's 75% white doesn't bother me.

    For instance, when was the last time you saw a movie with an Asian American hero who didn't either (1) know kung fu or (2) flail helplessly in the clutches of his own geekery?

    Harold and Kumar comes to mind. Also, king of the hill.

    When have you seen an Asian American love interest?

    Why specifically Asian American? Lots of Asian women are a love interest, and Jackie Chan (not asian american) has been a love interest in a lot of his movies. The only thing that bugs me is all the asian people who end up playing Japanese characters - sort of an 'all look alike' thing combined with Japan's jackassery in the region makes me view it as insulting.

    Have you ever noticed that if there's a black character in an action movie, he's almost certainly one of the first to die, and nearly guaranteed to be dead by the end?

    See Denzel Washington for counterexamples.

    I won't go on, but these sorts of cases have a powerful effect on society's perception of people of color, and on PoC's perceptions of themselves, too.

    You mean Black people, right? You know what else influences black people's perception? The idea that studying hard and doing well in school is selling out and that the only/best way out of the projects is dealing drugs. The bling culture that rap popularizes can't be good either.

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  220. Holy sexism, dude by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    To reiterate, I'm not denying that there is an disturbingly low percentage of women in FOSS development. I'm just questioning what's causing that. It's probably a number of factors including Hollywood not showing women as the computer hacker in many of their movies (except maybe Hackers). It's predominantly the stereotypical male. Women have to overcome that

    My jaw is hitting the floor. After admitting that society puts roadblocks in the way of women succeeding as FOSS coders, your answer is that "women have to overcome that"? Why don't we, you know, fix society? We could start with you not putting the onus on women, for one thing.

  221. Re:Odd, or typical, that you fail to get it comple by Labcoat+Samurai · · Score: 1

    You defend MikeeUSA's feelings by saying he has come to his extremist views from years of being exposed to extreme views.

    So, how come that you cannot come to the same conclusion in reverse? That those women you quote (often out of context) have come to their view from the decades, centuries even millenia of extremist views women have endured?

    I find it reasonable to conclude that that is the case for some of them. I also think it's irrelevant and does not at all justify hurtful speech targeted at a gender group... but then again, I wouldn't defend MikeUSA.

    All men are rapist. It was once the law that a woman had to obey her husband without question. Submit to him regardless of her own wishes. How do you define rape else then forcing sex against someones will?

    So all men did that? That's a fairly bold statement to make. I don't think it's reasonable to infer from a sexist law that all men forced their wives to have sex with them against their will. Besides, the statement was present tense. I am not a rapist. I am a man. Therefore, not all men are rapists. Now that we have established the statement's falsehood (that was easy), can we agree that calling a man a rapist is offensive and hurtful? And can we then agree that it is sexist to direct offensive and hurtful speech at a person based purely on that person's gender? I'm not sure why you're defending this comment...

    The marriage comment. Since we now regonize the right of a person to refuse sex even within marriage and that a woman is no longer the property of the husband, traditional marriage has indeed been abolished. It has been replaced by an entirely different version with competly different laws, just using the same name. The old was destroyed to make place for a new better more equal version.

    I admit to some ignorance here, but I somehow doubt that Sheila Cronin (whoever that is) made that comment back when women were legally considered the property of men. I doubt, in those days, that an organization like NOW would have been permitted to exist. So, consequently, I find it hard to believe that she was talking about anything other than the present incarnation of marriage. Not that I'm a big fan of marriage anyway, but some people like it, and I'm fairly sure it's fully opt-in.

    To kill an infant. We do this all the time, the west owns it wealth and health to the fact that women no longer drop a new kid every year. It allows for very long, expensive education and a high concentration of best food and medical care, rather then waste it on a dozen kids, most who will die because they do not get the resources they need. Why do you think Africa does so poorly? Everytime they do a bit better, they get an explosion of new people who they can't feed or educate. Birth control IS the answer. Her proposal should be seen as a way to shake things up, overkill to get people thinking about just what it means for a family that has no control over the number of children.

    My gosh that is a bold statement.... to put the entire success of the modern developed world squarely on the shoulders of contraception and abortion... Forget about evolution of political and economic thought. Forget about rule of law and civilizations founded on the principles of human rights. Apparently we owe our success to contraception. Hey, I won't even deny that it has helped, but come on...

    to decontaminate the planet. Again, an extreem suggestion but the counter result of the extreem in which baby girls in china are killed because they are not valued.

    Wait, aren't you just trying to distract us now? Formally, I guess that'd be tu quoque fallacy or something similar, but it basically just amounts to "Hmmm... yeah, that does sound bad.... but look at this, which is also bad" What's your point exactly? It doesn't make what she said *less* bad....

  222. And the fact that society values male professions by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    ... is just a coincidence, I'm sure.

    Besides this isn't the only field with gender inequity. Visit a college sometime and look inside their "health and human development" classes - all women. But nobody complains about sexism in HHD - they just accept the fact few men are interested in that field. The same is true in engineering.

    Right. Society steers women into relatively low-paying jobs, and men into relatively high paying jobs. No problem, right?

    And women bear the children == sexism? Call me when you're serious. Women bearing children is biology. Women not being in science & engineering is because they're encouraged not to be.

  223. Sex and the FOSS geek by tickticktickfast · · Score: 0

    1. If you are a geek its OK to give gratuitous or unintended offense to other human beings of any ilk. Its part of being a geek. Ilk includes maleness and femaleness aka manhood and womanhood. More on that later.
    3. Once you become a conscious or self aware geek its OK to enjoy offending people
    especially if they are so self absorbed that they think that you are thinking about them
    enough to sexually discriminate against them when it should be clear to anyone that if you are deep enough
    into the FOSS movement to give a crap about it that you are so f*cked up with nerdiness that you
    barely have any idea what sex is to begin with. (Look to your leader RMS for the most effective and
    acceptable ways to annoy and give offense without intending too.)
    4. About the sex thing. If you find people referring to you as a guy then you probably have a
    genital which is a protrusion on the front of your body just above the crotch. This protrusion
    is commonly referred to as a penis. (Its also a type of person but you already know about that.)
    A few(not many) people who have penises also have a pair of balls hanging in a sack below
    the base of the penis. Just to remove any remaining ambiguity, the penis is what you pee
    out of and it occasionally swells up and gets stiff for no apparent reason. If you find people
    referring to you as a woman then you will probably find that your nipples rest on top of soft mounds of flesh
    that are larger than the mounds of flesh beneath the nipples of about 50% of the rest of the
    population and you also probably have a second hole (commonly referred to as a vagina)
    about an inch and a half from your anus. You probably do not have a penis or balls in a sack
    even though people may constantly assert that you have a pair.

  224. Like the five nine's argument by bbasgen · · Score: 1

    ....fewer than 0.1% of comments on development mailing lists are sexist ... what is the real "problem" that exists?

    99.9% uptime isn't exactly a standard bearer for reliability in IT. 1 out of 1,000 comments are sexist? A dev list is about software development, right? Ostensibly the number should be near zero when excluding spam, etc. How many comments are on a dev lists per day? If it is 1000 per day, that would be one sexist remark every day.

    Suppose the average person speaks 1,000 words in a day. If "only" one of those words is sexist -- is that not a "real problem"?

    The whole denial issue about sexism/racism/etc is really quite simple. Institutions that believe they are magically immune from a cultural and society construct that is very old and ingrained are, as a matter of fact, in denial. The very nature of these ails is that only with concerted efforts against them is it possible to effectively mitigate their influence. FOSS has been conceited by the anonymity of the internet and lulled to believe that this has inoculated the community for society's ills. It is about time this discussion gets started in a serious way -- the road is long ahead.

  225. Agreed. by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

    I don't shun or reject friends, family, coworkers, whomever, simply because they carelessly said something hurtful or offensive. But if they A) don't acknowledge what they said is problematic and B) refuse to apologize, I eventually will decide to remove myself from situations where I have to interact with them. That's what the issue seems to be here. Not merely that FOSS has issues with sexist jokes - western culture has an issue with sexist jokes - but that a movement which, to me, has connected itself with ideals of rights and equality isn't able or willing to apologize about them.

    I think yours is a really useful comment here, and I will try to build upon it.

    Complaints about sexism tend to come down to a few components that you've identified here:

    1. Many men act in a manner that shows that they don't understand that women have a different perspective to them.
    2. While some of these men will understand and take responsibility when called on it, many more will in fact show themselves unwilling to understand women's perspective, or worse, go on the attack.

    This comment and this one are perfect examples of the first point, where the posters completely fail to understand how women usually perceive being asked out by men. There are a few excellent responses here, here, here and here, which try to help the original poster put himself in the woman's shoes and understand how he would be seen if he were to make an advance on the woman without an appropriate context. He'd be one of dozens of men who signal an interest on nothing more than the fact that she's got breasts and a vagina, a good proportion of which are pushy and aggressive when they are turned down.

    Now, this really just ought to be common sense, but if you want to have a productive interaction with somebody else you have to understand their point of view and accommodate it. That means that you're not supposed have things go exclusively your way at the expense of the other; you're supposed help the other person to get what they want in exchange for you getting what you want. Failure to abide by this norm gets you called names like "asshole."

    It also just ought to be common sense that if you say something that offends somebody else and they complain about it, well, you might have failed to understand that person's point of view, and that you ought to at the very least demonstrate some effort to understand why they were offended. Of course that only goes so far (some people truly do take offense too easily), and you may judge that you don't have anything to apologize for, but you ought to at least act like you care about how other people think, and that you're not entitled to offend others. Hell, by effectively and sympathetically summarizing why the other person felt offended at what you did or said, you actually gain face among people who are not assholes. You come across somebody who's interested in taking responsibility for the effects of their actions even when some of those effects are unintended. People who are genuinely and justifiably offended tend to be satisfied when you act this way; people who are unjustifiably offended don't, but they tend to end up looking worse.

    Again, all of this ought to just be common sense, part of the unwritten "How not to be an Asshole" manual. But the problem is that men are brought up to regularly be assholes to women, pure and simple, while women are brought up to allow men to get away with it. That is what institution

  226. Dip-Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not everything needs to be politicised and made part of the great American nuroticism/tree-hug,

    There is absolutely nothing about FOSS that is sexist, except that not many women want to do it,
    that is their choice. If they want to start there is NO bar.

    Don't make a mountain out of nothing!

  227. Oh, jesus by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Yes, you can nutpick feminist comments all you want - for each one of these, you could dig up about a million ant-feminist nutjob comments (and no, I'm not going to bother to do so). But regardless of all that, the fact is that women are seriously discriminated against in the world of science and technology - the 1.5% figure ought to be somewhat convincing.

    I seriously can't believe I'm even reading a defense of comments like those made by "mikeeUSA".

  228. Exactly the point. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    It doesn't take very many posts that imply "girls aren't welcome here" before girls take the point that they're not welcome here.

  229. -1, Redundant by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Your argument has already been rather devastatingly refuted above (see harlows_monkeys post on how many nigger/kike/etc posts are acceptable, given that most developers are white). Obviously, most posts in a technical forum are going to be technical. But it only takes a few posts that denigrate women to make women conclude that they're not welcome.

  230. Is it that hard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it really that hard to program or to be a scientist or be an engineer and have a vagina? The answer is no.

    Anyone who brings this issue up is simply aiming for some cheap self-promotion. They don't actually believe in their own cause; it's just a way of tapping into institutionalized white-liberal guilt.

    This may sound harsh and "chauvinistic" but this is my candid opinion as a women and as a programmer.

  231. Sure, it's a molehill by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    ... when it's not targeted at you. You're very fond of throwing around the "tiny percentage" idea. Here's another one for you: only a tiny percentage of blacks were lynched following the civil war. So the rest should have just "manned up", right? The truth: it doesn't take very many instances of discrimination to intimidate an entire group.

  232. Mod parent up by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Those who continue to say "we're not sexists! Everything's fine, dammit!" need to come up with some explanation as to why female participation in FOSS is so low. Unless, of course, they just don't give a damn... which is instructive in itself.

  233. Begging the question. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Ok, then tell me. If there's "no sexism", then why is it that there are practically no women involved in FOSS? Especially given that female participation in commercial software development is relatively high.

    1. Re:Begging the question. by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Loaded question--sexism may exist, but it doesn't necessarily explain why low FOSS involvement.

      One possibility is that programmers are disproportionately male to begin with, and maybe most of the female developers are already working commercially. A lot of FOSS development is unpaid labour, and unless you're required to volunteer at something, you're probably passionate about it. Passionate enough to do it outside working hours, anyway.

      This results in the stereotypical image of the programming geek image, coding away in their parents' basement. Either there's a good reason this image is almost always a male; or, if all things are equal, it's sexist against males.

      I suspect it's statistics first, i.e. fewer female developers to start with and they aren't as likely to participate in FOSS if they program at work, with occasional sexist attacks directed against female FOSS coders by a small but outspoken minority.

  234. Right. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    being careful not to offend

    Right. Because trying not to offend people is a horrible crime that ought to be stamped out. I think you need to wake up, lady. I'm in the tech business too, and I see women getting condescended to about 10x as often as I see political correctness being a problem. And I'm a man.

  235. Ok, then explain it to me by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    There is a difference between "sexism" (an act) and a correlation that only X % of Y are women.

    Over 50% of the population is female. Something like 20% of all coders (including commercial software) are female. But only 1.5% of FOSS coders are female. Why is that? Can't be that there aren't enough women (the over 50% part). Can't be that women are inherently bad coders (lots in the commercial software world).

    There is also a difference between sexism the act and a moron who thinks it's funny to put porn in a powerpoint presentation, even when 98% of his audience is going to be male.

    (slaps forehead) Now I get it... you just don't know what sexism IS. I've got news for you, partner - "putting porn in the powerpoint" IS "sexism the act". By definition. It's, you know, in the law and everything. Haven't you ever worked for a company? If so, better pay more attention during the "respect for others" training.

  236. Going too far by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can see from articles like this that we aren't far from my Black text on a White background being viewed as 'oppressive', god forbid I have a block of code I want to delete :S

    You'll change more people's views by proving why they are wrong - in this case through good code - rather than by citing oppression and political correctness.

    I suffer the geek/nerd prejudice from society but I'm not about to go preaching political correctness, I'll just live well and do what I enjoy, less time wasted more time spent enjoying life.

  237. Feminazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, some definitions.
    sexism is the opposite of gender equality.
    Any position which holds that one gender is "better" than another is by the above, a "sexist" position.

    So, Feminist is Sexist, just diametrically opposed from the more socially prevalent "Masculist" position.

    Meh. The poster is jumping up and down about "Sexism" whilst obviously being Sexist themselves. Is it any wonder they aren't taken seriously?

  238. Googling for proof is not proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With Google, it'll take me less than five minutes to find proof that a certain world leader is actually a reptilian alien in disguise!

  239. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

    I would argue that the Wells Fargo thing is a third thing -- it's taking advantage of the socially underprivileged position of a group (black people who should qualify for prime loans but don't have access to enough information or market options in lenders to know that) in order to make a profit.

    That's not twirling their moustaches and hoping to screw over black people; it's just taking advantage of a racially biased system.

    People need to let go of the idea that racism has to be obviously self-interested or malicious in order to exist. The thing with institutional racism is that it exists without anybody needing to have consciously discriminatory attitudes at all. That's more like belief in quantum physics than in religion. I mean, the disparity does exist; let's look for an explanation for it. Just shrugging your shoulders and accepting it, that would be the "faith-based" (or intellectually uncurious) response.

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  240. Cartoons have the final say! by Malibee · · Score: 1
  241. Call out Sexism the same way we call out FUD by Ice+Station+Zebra · · Score: 1

    Sexism is something we shouldn't put up with and I lump it right along with M$ FUD, and the ever increasing FOSS FUD that I'm seeing. Call it out, you might not get the outcome you desire, especially concerning FOSS FUD, people just don't recognize it, kinda like sexism.

  242. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

    You are not an equalist, you are a bullshitter who bases his theories on strawmen and presents fictional characters and psychos as the examples of true feminism.

  243. Re:Hey women by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

    And yet you just did, funny that.

  244. Funny you should mention that: FDA Guidelines by Brad+Mace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe have a look at this: FDA Food Defect Levels Handbook. For instance, strawberries are allowed to be up to 45% moldy. Wheat flour is A-OK as long as it averages less than 75 insect fragments per 50 grams. Cocoa beans can contain 10mg of mammal feces per pound. The point is, perfection is not possible. The existence of some sexist comments among billions of internet postings doesn't justify condemning the entire community. I'll fully support you in condemning individuals for their own behaviors. However, I think most of us have realized that arguing with internet trolls is futile. So if some jackass statement in a forum isn't followed up with righteous indignation, don't assume everyone else agrees with them.

  245. Sexism in technology drives women away by rlh100 · · Score: 1

    The sexist environment is not keeping women out. It is driving them away.

    Find a female friend involved with computers and ask them what they think.

    I know many female systems administrators that have left the field. And in talking to them the common theme is that they get tired of the macho environment.

    To flip the coin how would you as guy feel about working in an environment where:
    1) The after hours activities were knitting and quilting and if you missed these activities you were likely to miss important discussions about work.
    2) The casual discussion was about how rude men were and their social blunders.
    3) Where a casual off color comment was met with a: "tisk, tisk, tisk, we all know how immature men are"
    4) Where you were judged by how neat and tidy your desk was: "you know Joe, if you put your papers away it would be so much nicer"
    5) Where you were reminded of what a terrible date you would make.
    6) You would overhear comments about what a slob you were every time your shirt came un-tucked.

    I know that I would leave fairly quickly. I suspect that this is what sexism feels like.

    Now these are not the same activities as male sexism but they relate:
    1) Lets go the strip club when we get off
    2) Comparing the looks, tits, legs of co-workers, girlfriends, stars
    3) Casual sexual comments or slang that is sexual in nature
    4) When someone talks about how hard something was to do or was a last minute rush being told that "real coders work best in all nighters".
    5) Hitting on a coworker
    6) Whistles, rude comments, nudges and winks.

    It is not that we men are actively turning women away. We create an environment that is not pleasant for women to be around. They get tired of it and they leave. The split is made and we loose something.

    We know men are men and we are big and tough. But... It is kind of a drag to work in a department of 5 men in a company with less than 10% women. But hey it is a social gaming site and that is a real sexist environment.

    RLH

    PS, I will be the first to admit that my female examples are sexist. A woman would have better examples.

  246. Welcome to the Interwebs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to the Interwebs,

    where all the men are men,
    all the women are men
    and all the little girls are FBI agents.

    I'll say I've seen a lot of sexism in online gaming, but when you consider that's mostly 15-25 year old's who haven't been within 6 feet of any women except their own mothers... you've gotta consider the source.

    Oh wait, I just described most FOSS developers. Yeah, nevermind ;-)

  247. Just look at most Linux screenshots .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always wandered why somebody would publish pictures with scandid women on the backgrounds.

    Although I personally have no problem looking at a cute girl, it is very UNPROFESSIONAL and in all honestly SEXIST.

  248. FOSS missing out ... by lolococo · · Score: 1

    ... almost 50% of potential contributors - assuming there are approximately as many men as women in the world. That's what the 98% vs 2% tells me.
    Maybe we could focus on that part and get some work done ?

  249. Re:Seems like a contrived issue. MS astrosturfing? by Your.Master · · Score: 1

    What the fuck. You caught the insanity of the GP in the first paragraph, and then commit the very same error in the next paragraph by bringing up religion like it had anything to do with what he said.

    I can only assume you believe that people who cite Occam's Razor in any capacity must be atheists. Which is not true (although naturally sometimes an atheist will cite Occam's Razor).

  250. I've tried to interst my wife in coding... by m6ack · · Score: 1

    ... but every time I ask her, she says she'd rather make me a sandwich.

  251. Re:Seems like a contrived issue. MS astrosturfing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need help.

  252. The Solution To Sexism in OSS by hellop2 · · Score: 1

    Choose a non-gender-specific handle.

    --
    How many more years will slashdot have an off-by-one error on your Score in your profile?
  253. MOD PARENT UP! by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    I know it wont happen, it makes to much sense, I've preached this sort of thing for years. Women need to make a decision which type of woman they want to be, 12th or 21st century, either is fine, but stick with it in any given environment. It's ok to be one at home and the other at work, but you can't switch on a dime because it suites you better.

    I'm also getting tired of the fact the white male is the only legally discriminated against portion of the population now. The universal scape goat - it sucks, and I've been denied jobs based on my race and sex because other quotas were not met yet.

    This makes tons of sense - being a victim is 90% of a time a mentality - once the other 10% is gone the other 90% SHOULD follow it.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  254. re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 'mom test' was mentioned back in 2007. http://www.linux.com/archive/feature/118863

  255. Re:I put this in the same box as the obvious eliti by PeterBrett · · Score: 1

    i personally hang out in #openbsd, #linux, #macdev, as well as 3-4 other channels of popular, large projects, and i see exactly what he or she speaks about, on a frequent basis as opposed to your observation. in #linux in particular i've been a visitor the past 4 years, spending much of my time "picking up" the people who go there to most often just get slagged down on for asking "stupid questions" as they try to learn.

    Yes, you're one of the "nice guys" I mentioned. I'm often in #kde and #fedora, and the people there seem fairly helpful (although the #fedora folks have a penchant for telling people that they don't actually want to do whatever it is they're asking about).

  256. Yawn by codeButcher · · Score: 1

    IT people are more socially inept than the norm.

    Next article please.

    --
    Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
  257. Trying to fight alleged sexism with real sexism by piotru · · Score: 1

    "On September 19th, the GNOME Foundation and the Free Software Foundation will host a mini-summit on how to increase women's participation in the free and open source software (FOSS) communities."

    Not "increase talented developer participation", but "increase women's participation".

    THIS AGENDA IS SEXIST. The Gnome Foundation's meeting agenda was to introduce sexism to FOSS.

  258. Why should anybody need to have backbone? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Why should anybody be prepared to be discriminated against and abused in order to progress in any pursuit?

    I find the misogynist attitudes of some truly telling.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  259. Subversive PC behaviour? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    What do you suggest? Compassionate conservatism?

    The term PC is used by people who wished their prejudices would have free reign. The term is the refuge of the scoundrel, the proverbial hole in the sand where they firmly stick their head.

    Many women are pointing out to this problem, as well as many statistics, and how they are ostracised when they raise the issue.

    The typical answer is to point out that it is somehow their fault. Typical blame the victim mentality.

    I have witnessed how female colleagues are literally hounded out of jobs because the men around them cant stomach the idea of working in a even field with a woman, and even more unthinkable, that they have to report to one.

    I fail completely to see what is subversive about pointing out this issue, a real failing of the Computing and IT industry, to our collective shame.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Subversive PC behaviour? by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      I have witnessed how female colleagues are literally hounded out of jobs because the men around them cant stomach the idea of working in a even field with a woman, and even more unthinkable, that they have to report to one.

      I've seen men who hate reporting to the woman because they ASSume that the woman will be making gender-biased decisions ONLY. Let's leave the fact that she works alongside men and has superiors that are male and female. It's all about the man not wanting a woman for a boss because it's so very easy to pick from the lowest-hanging fruit to find something to complain about. I'm right on with ya here!

      The other point of you having experienced men not wanting women alongside them (as opposed to superiors), I would love to hear a story you have. I've never seen that one before in my career. I've only been in one position where the girl was "the hottie" and another one of the employees was constantly pursuing her even though she was married, but that's a story for another day. What's an example of men not liking the women on the team?

    2. Re:Subversive PC behaviour? by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      I've worked in a few positions where I was one of the only men in the group. My point on overly PC-ness is only to point out that there are, indeed, differences between men and women. Also, it's not a horrible thing to tell a joke, even if it does target a certain stereotype.

      Now there is a point where this could be taken as harassment, I'm just saying that people are *WAY* to sensitive about things. As whitey, growing up in a diverse neighborhood, I've experienced racial discrimination more than once. That doesn't mean I think the solution is heavy-handed political correctness. The only thing PC attitudes do is polarize a given issue.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    3. Re:Subversive PC behaviour? by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Whining about political correctness is the same as whining about insulting someone and having them take offense.

      I really do not understand how you can complain about popular opinion directed against you, and, in the same post, support a dismissal of the importance of popular opinion. Do you think before you type?

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    4. Re:Subversive PC behaviour? by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      Maybe people need to be a little less delicate and easily offended.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
  260. Yet more antiintellectualism in Slashdot by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    How ironic, and unsurprising.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  261. That is not Engineering. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    That is Satanism, or something like that.

    No sane Engineer will go and check everything himself. It is simply impractical, expensive and stupid.

    If you really do what you are preaching I reckon you either are your own boss or have a very stupid one that is not doing his job.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:That is not Engineering. by lgw · · Score: 1

      On the whole, engineers design systems that produce a final product, or are themselves a complex final product. This is especially true where software is invovled. If you design a system that's optimized according to the vendor specs and call it a day, you suck as an engineer (if you're only a year or two out of school, this is expected), get out of the "school problem" mindset and into the real world.

      Design systems around the fact that the vendor is a lying bastard. Allow for tolerances worse than specified. Put quality control into place to sample the quality of the parts you use on an ongoing basis. Do something to ensure the the differences between theory and reality won't cause your product to fail.

      The same mindset applies to software: never trust a complex third-party system. API documentation is often wrong. Critical libraries often have corner-case bugs. System calls that you just can't live without may leak resources in some situations. Plan for code to suck, learn how to debug, learn how to find a compiler bug, or a system call bug, or a bug in the virtualization layer. Think hard about large third-party libraries: if open source, can you debug them; if closed source, will the lying bastard vendor really fix a bug that matters to you but not to them promptly?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  262. Talk about not seeing the forest.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    "Are you raising the subject of sexism just based on the fact that only 1.5% of FOSS developers are women? I"

    I frankly rest my case there.

    How somebody can be so blind to such a statistic is beyond the realms of the understandable.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  263. No, it is a combination of those bad apples... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    .... and the people that fail to recognize that as a major problem.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  264. I, I, I. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    that is all what I see (irony aside).

    People here saying I have not seen it, not realizing that people that actually bully women know it is worng, and in general will not publish it as a fine accomplishment.

    As fro feminism being anti male, you frankly don't know what you are talking about. You should educate yourself first before saying something that is so clearly untrue, which you would know if you have cared to inform yourself at least minimally.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:I, I, I. by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Feminism, in its ideal form, is not (perhaps) anti-male. Islam, in its ideal form does not (perhaps, and all theological arguments aside) promote violence against anyone and everyone who is not Islamic. And yet the people we hear about, the people on the news, the people that accost you in the street with their signs and pamphlets and slogans purporting to represent those groups, are.

      Feminism is sexism. It probably wasn't, in the 1960's. Maybe it wasn't in the 1980's. As best I can tell, though, it is now. In my experience, there are a lot of women who think that women deserve equality, not necessarily superiority. Those who have told me that they consider themselves feminists, have qualified it with "in the classic" or "original sense."

  265. Not all pranks are hazing by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    And this does not even compare to the mildest of hazings.

  266. That the parent post is marked troll... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... is a clear a validation of a point as I have ever seen in Slashdot.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  267. The problem is discrimination, lack of oportunity by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Only somebody seriously derided considers normal that 98 of each 100 people, doing an activity with no apparent barriers of entry, are male.

    Check statistics in any other parts of the industry, or in any other industries, and you may get a clue.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  268. Have a little cry and get over it. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    And then people wonder what women find distasteful about dealing with males on this field.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  269. What a coincidence.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    .... that most couples reach the same conclusion, often irrespective of the fact that the woman has better professional prospects.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:What a coincidence.... by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Its not a coincidence at all - they have a causative factor. Women are genetically predisposed to nurture, while men are genetically predisposed to competition and protection.

      That doesn't make on sex better than the other at either of these roles. The drive for a man to provide for his family has a common root with the drive to mate and create that family in the first place. We are not unthinking animals, though, and we can control out biological impulses - we can not have children, or we can arrive at a workable (or better) arrangement for caring and providing for a family based upon rationality.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
  270. Wide generalizations, stereotypes... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Unsupported assertions...

    Your comment is a typical example of sexist commentary.

    To see how bad it really is replace Women with "blacks" or "gays" and see how well that sounds.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Wide generalizations, stereotypes... by bolthole · · Score: 1

      it would sound ridiculous... because to "replace women with blacks or gays" is a ridiculous thing to do.

      "Hey I know, lets take an article about eskimos, and replace 'eskimo', with 'pregnant teenager'. Wow, it sounds totally off! Well that must mean the original article is totally wrong then."

      if you cant debate an article on the specific points of the article, rather than making ludicrous comparisons, or kneejerk labelling them "sexist", then you've already lost the argument.

  271. Re:This is sexism, BUT from a small group of femal by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    "Whoever thinks that women would be treated bad in IT/FOSS culture, obviously has never seen how one women in a IT team can make all the men there their slaves who want to fulfill her every wish. If anything, then men would love to see more women in their teams."

    You see? This is exactly the kind of mentality that drive women away.

    It is not normal that 1 out of 65 people doing something is a woman, that would be acceptable in Saudi Arabia, that people in Slashdot defend this state of affairs is an ominous indictment.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  272. Really? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    We must be reading a different website.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  273. It is sexism. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Why discussions should be always done in terms that satisfy the males participants? Why should people be interrupted for example?

    Why are you mentioning "whininess" (sic) as an intrinsically female trait?

    Sexism is very subtle, as your comments above demonstrate amply.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:It is sexism. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Why discussions should be always done in terms that satisfy the males participants? Why should people be interrupted for example?

      Why do you automatically consider 'being interrupted' to be a male conversation trait? Isn't that sexist? Females interrupt conversations, too, but you seem to be implying that they don't.

      Why are you mentioning "whininess" (sic) as an intrinsically female trait?

      I didn't mention whininess as an intrinsically female trait. Why did you perceive something that wasn't there? I said that the GP came across as whiney, and she does. That is something I deduce from her way of writing, not from her gender.

      You, on the other hand, come across as somewhat paranoid. Do you always try to find sexism in situations where it doesn't exist?

      --
      Qxe4
    2. Re:It is sexism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I said that the GP came across as whiney, and she does. That is something I deduce from her way of writing, not from her gender."

      Interesting. You come across as a fuckwit. That's something that I deduce from your way of writing, not from your gender...

    3. Re:It is sexism. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      And you come across as a coward. That is something I deduce from, well, you posted as an anonymous coward.

      --
      Qxe4
  274. I am curious.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Who forced you to read the thread?

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  275. Re:Ubuntu “Karmic Koala” released for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    THAWTELESS, West London, Monday — Canonical, Inc. has announced the release later this month of Ubuntu Linux 9.10, "Karmic Koala," to men.

    Project founder Mark Shuttleworth explained that "this stuff is difficult to explain to girls" and thought they'd have gotten the hint when he called 8.04 "Hairy Hardon."

    I laughed aloud at that point.

    And then guiltily wondered if I was sexist...

    Oh dear.

  276. You are quoting MikeeUSA? Come on.. by RichiH · · Score: 1

    I did not read the link, but I know him _very_ well. He is shunned by pretty much everyone. As are a lot of other well-known bullies, be they sexist, racist or whateverist.

    There will always be loud idiots blaring their mis-guided crap into the air. But that does _not_ mean that their blabbering is relevant to a given community.

    The main thing, imo, is the latent "porn-is-cool" attitude in many FLOSS communities. But, as unfortunate as this may be, unless a lot of these people get laid on a regular basis, this will not change.

  277. Psychology, of a sort ... by jandersen · · Score: 1

    I suppose it isn't all that strange that there has been such strong reactions; most men don't themselves feel that they look down on women, and it simply feels deeply unjust to be called "sexist". However, that doesn't in itself mean that one can't reasonably be described as a sexist - after all, just to pick the most extreme example, a rapist will also try to justify his actions with "But women like it" - clearly the perpetrator of a behaviour is not always the best judge of his/her own actions. (BTW, if you now feel extremely angry over my words, please read them again - I am not saying that being mildly sexist is the same as rape!)

    I think the right attitude, if one sincerely doesn't want to be sexist, is to say "I don't intend to be sexist - if you think I am, please explain to me how".

    All this goes for other kinds of bigotry as well; as the British National Party would say - "We are not racists, we just can't stand ". Bigotry is easy - one could almost say natural - and until we live in a better world, it is something we actively need to learn to avoid, every day of our lives.

  278. That's nothing... by gryf · · Score: 1

    Raise the subject of sexism, and you are met with illogic that I can only compare to that of the tobacco companies trying to deny the link between their products and cancer.

    That's nothing, try suggesting that Linux is ready for mass adoption as a desktop OS.

    --

    #-#
    Ad Astra Per Aspera
    A rough road leads to the stars
    1. Re:That's nothing... by gryf · · Score: 1

      Fail. New /. system blows sometimes. Should have read:
      That's nothing, try suggesting that Linux ISN'T ready for mass adoption as a desktop OS.

      --

      #-#
      Ad Astra Per Aspera
      A rough road leads to the stars
  279. slightly off-topic by Tristfardd · · Score: 1

    I enjoy the way you write, good English has a special feel. Regardless of the point of contention, "It certainly changes how the people saying them should be viewed, but it doesn't simply excuse their actions." leads down a troublesome path. One can respond to an action, one can't excuse an action. Only intent warrants excuse. Excusing an act deals with ethics and religion. It can deal with law, but only in narrow specific contexts. Actions are "things". Intents are outside the realm of the physical universe. So, in this case, what to do when people act like jerks, unintentionally? Slog through the swamp, either that or somehow find a way to become one of those people who affect the world instead of being affected by it. I don't know how to do this. I wish I did, and suspect that it has a lot with truly being an adult. Anyway, I like how you use the language.

  280. What counts as sexism? by foniksonik · · Score: 1

    Does using abusive language count? Is it okay for a man to call another man an aHole or a dildo or a fTard but not okay to call a woman a cWord or bWord or a twat? Yes it's abusive but is it sexist?

    Do these verbal abuses stop people from participating in the FLOSS community? Maybe if they are consistently the target of such and from all directions... but is it sexist?

    Is pornographic imagery sexist? If you believe that pornography is sexist then you'll also believe that the imagery is sexist, but is it really... adult entertainment targeted at adults which caters in the majority to it's largest demographic. Is heterosexual porn imagery also homosexualist... in that it is offensive to homosexuals?

    I'd say no to all of the above... it's not sexist. In poor taste, complete wastes of resources and time and counter-productive yes but targeted at women in an attempt to preclude them from participating in the FLOSS community, no.

    What would be sexist?

    Establishing groups, events, conferences, or otherwise instrumental community building events and then not inviting women of note to join, attend, speak or generally participate... that would be sexism.

    You can't equate personal attacks against individuals who happen to be of a particular group with institutional bigotry against that group. If anything it means that the institution in question simply has their fair share of bigots and that those who feel that this has no place in the community should shun those individuals who are being counter-productive.

    However, a failure to shun them is not an indication of institutional bigotry itself - more an unwillingness of the community to self-police or to bring such personal issues into the authority or responsibility of the community members and rather focus of their intended goals and allow such problems to be worked out separately from the community in question.

    Not all problems in a community should be policed by that community - ie: not all members with drug problems should be forced into rehab before being allowed to participate, not all members with bad credit should have to pay off their creditors, not all members who are not registered to vote must register, etc. etc. and not all sexist members should be required to give up their personal opinions. However - members should be encouraged to leave such matters out of community affairs if they do not want to be held accountable for the disruptions they create.

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  281. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An honest question, as I have a vague idea but not enough that I could put into words: (How) Is the result sexist?

  282. Sexism by rayk_sland · · Score: 1

    Bruce assumed much in thinking that one idealism would promote high ideals in all other areas, even ones that are off some peoples radar. Open source people are not primarily saints. They're just people who are focused on fixing one piece of the pie -- the pie being an aggregate of all that is wrong with the world. They might just not get it "right" in all other areas. Who can?

    --
    Jedis are stupid. If they were so powerful, why couldn't they handle counseling for a kid who missed his mom?
  283. Women are not minorities by poptones · · Score: 1

    There's more women than men, you poor brainwashed fool.

  284. I,I,I... by poptones · · Score: 1

    Am 47 fucking years old. How old are you? You do not think life is the great educator?

    I bet you're like 22. Probably still in school and brainwashed by "women's studies" classes.

    Maybe not - maybe you're older... so lessee, why don't you discount the points I made? Your assertions I am wrong are meaningless when you give no effort at all toward discounting the proofs given; the agenda of feminism is to equate thoughts to an actual crime.

    Oh, but you can't remove all those posts from the internet, can you? The editorials, the comments made by the legislators, the comments made by the pundits back when the first of the child porn laws were passed under the Clinton administration? Or the FACT our kids have become a revenue source to the drug industry by playing upon this fetishism of the american child?

    "It takes a village." Yeah, fuck off - our kids are not your kids.

  285. pics or it didn't happen by nobodylocalhost · · Score: 1

    the amount of nerd rage and the magnitude of how seriously people take this are funny beyond words. It's stupidly simple. nerds and geeks are mostly deemed socially inept irl. That is not to say they are not social creatures, it only means they operate on a different set of social norms than what the rest of the world are operating on. Lots of women don't understand it, don't want to understand it, and don't want to accept it. what's wrong with assuming you to be male unless proven otherwise? It just the same as how your peers discriminated and avoided nerdy / geeky guys since grade school. The way i see it, it's a two way street, and you unfortunately are the lone "freak" in the middle of the crosswalk of this whole mess.

    --
    Where is the "Ignorant" mod tag?
    1. Re:pics or it didn't happen by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      To your subject line: http://xkcd.com/322/
       
      And I hung out with the nerdy/bookworm boys and girls. Much more intellectually stimulating than fashion.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    2. Re:pics or it didn't happen by nobodylocalhost · · Score: 1

      first of all, i didn't ask for anything naked, you are just assuming i am. personally 3d nudies are pig disgusting to me, please don't put words into what i am trying to say. second, like i said, just because you are different doesn't mean the masses are the same way as you are. you are and will be the minority for a while until society do away with that idea. on the grand scale, you are but a blip on the radar. obviously you have an issue skipping through thing and adding things while reading, i suggest you correct that before getting yourself in any real problems.

      --
      Where is the "Ignorant" mod tag?
    3. Re:pics or it didn't happen by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      HA! http://xkcd.com/322/. Nice. Not that it even needs mention, but there's a guy making the calls. Go figure.

    4. Re:pics or it didn't happen by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      I was going to reply to the other super-defensive dude who replied to you, but I opted out. Thought you might enjoy it, though ;)
      All below:

      Actually, I was going to reply to your fan with the following, and opted out. Thought you might enjoy reading it, though:

      You have the word "nobody" in your user name. You mentioned the words "minority" and "naked" in your post. That means you like having sex with racially different people only. You use the word "grand," so clearly you're paying a hooker 1000 of some form of currency to engage in prostitute activity.

      What I said makes no sense and has to connection to the point you were expressing. Now look at what you wrote. They were trying to express something humorous and you took it as an attack. You know what people usually do when they see themselves being referenced? Defend themselves. Mmmhmm. You're making it look more like you're actually seeing some truth rather than a joke.

      You're telling someone that everything they are possibly pointing out as an issue that could use discussion is nothing but accusations toward your beliefs, in your own head. Your messages make absolutely no sense except for the individuals who can read between the lines:

      You must always be on top. You're the winner. Everyone else is just a tool to make you feel better about yourself. Whenever they speak or type, it's ALL about you. Everything you think and feel is correct. It's right. They're wrong. All of them. Instead of reading the message they're trying to express about something completely innocent and partially inane, with some personal experience driven being shared, you take it as a set of words to throw back at them expecting fear, guilt, and/or lack of response. The best ones are the ones who reply to your replies because it gives you something else to pick on. You can take those emotions received and use it to build up your self-esteem as "that guy who was the last one speaking." That's right, you won because the intelligent individual laughed at your reply and didn't even have the time of day to respond.
      You're feeling that anger inside right now, aren't you? That's called epinephrine. Oh, that's right, the average individual calls it adrenaline. Yeah, spike that! SPIKE IT!
      There are other ways to get a rush. Try endorphins. Go out and take a walk; try a run.
      You know what? When you answer back with your garbage response that is absolutely contradictory to everything I've mentioned, I'm NOT reading it. I'm not answering.
      You know what? That means you're the winner! Yaaaay! :D

      Oh, and learn to spell.

  286. Code does NOT contain genitailia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  287. Can't see your tits in your text by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    Frankly, I don't spend much time thinking about whether the person that I am typing a response is male or female since, it has no bearing at all on 99% of discussions. If you asked me if the person who wrote any given message was a man, I might get the feeling that its so, I might not. However, since women are underrepresented in many of these forums, it is correct most of the time to assume the person is a man. What of it?

    People are creatures of habits and guesses. Sometimes those guesses are wrong.

    This is a simple guess, based on experience, because we grew up with it being more normal to refer to people with gender based pronouns. In fact, some of us have had the experience of having people get pissy because we used a gender neutral pronoun (if you don't believe me, the next time you run into someone with a child and are unsure of the gender, see how quickly you get corrected when you refer to their child as "it")

    and... "ze"? I am sorry that someone invented a new word that you like and it hasn't caught on yet. This is the first that I am even seeing "ze" as an english word. Yet you seem to take personal offense that people don't use it. You are not the first person to find human language to be resistant to intentional change... http://lmgtfy.com/?q=esperanto

    Essentially, I am all for fighting real sexism. I am all for getting women into IT, and wherever else that they want to be and make themselves qualified to be. Some sports have talked of getting rid of the gender divide, in favor of weight classes, since it is a more fair way to divide competitors.

    I wrestled in high school and thats exactly what we were doing 15 years ago. Were there still issues? You bet. Still are I bet. However, I tend to be of the opinion that this sort of social change happens through generations, rather than through winning over individuals.

    -Steve

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  288. Re:Keynotes LKML posts by micheas · · Score: 1

    Follow the comments and realize that the women would not have been as upset if the participants had not been 90% male, if the audience mix was more or less 50/50 male female the presentation would have just been labeled as being in extremely bad taste.

    Some of this may be we (the open source community) have a problem, because we have a problem.

    But that doesn't help fix the problem.

  289. Re:Odd, or typical, that you fail to get it comple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, who is defending him? Even Vadim isn't really defending this turd so much as he's making a statement about the tendency of social groups to sub-divide under their own self-induced stresses.

    If we can't keep a mailing list together what hope do we have of equality in a larger world that would often rather we not be a part of it.

    Like it or not sexism is a fact of life. Like racism dealing with it cannot consist only of eliminating it. If we wait for that we'll be waiting for another 10,000 years, if it ever happens.

  290. Slashdot isn't perfect, either. by curare19 · · Score: 1
    I know no one will probably read this after 1,000+ comments, but I wanted to have my say. We've come a long way in a short time.

    In the late 90s/early 00s, there was an article on Slashdot about how women were outnumbering men in the purchase of electronics and computing equipment. I remember jumping into the thread, thinking "Surely my enlightened brethren will celebrate this additional diversity in their field!"

    Instead, I got comments about how women were clearly buying these things for their husbands, being misled by savvy (and male) salespeople, and some snarky comments about the nature of the "electronics" being purchased. (Either stoves, or washing machines, or something else that vibrates.) I got the feeling these techies were intimidated by someone else infringing on their territory. Yes, many of the comments were supposed to be funny, but they were clearly jokes laid thinly on top of sincere feelings. Now how do you think that made me feel about participating in this community?

    Things have gotten much better since then, but don't you think the low percentage of women in the FOSS community may be related to some held-over, more open sexism from times past? Upon being burned once or twice, many women will just give up trying to be part of the boys' club. Additionally, though openly sexist comments are taboo now, the collective and subtle actions of an organization may all work together to feel a specific group feel unwelcome.

    The commenters who are demanding specific examples of sexism (and when being provided with them, calling them single incidents not representative of the entire community) are misguided. The FOSS community doesn't need a witch hunt - it needs to look at the overall feel of the community and determine if something about that is exclusionary. It's not easy, and it's very warm-and-fuzzy, and many people in the FOSS community don't understand the problem if it doesn't consist of 0s and 1s.

  291. ze is not a word. by malp · · Score: 1

    ze is not a word. Use of he to refer to a person of unknown gender was prescribed by manuals of style and school textbooks from the early 19th century until around the 1960s. You could argue it's archaic, but using he as a general neutral pronoun is perfectly acceptable.

    well, basically, if we don't come out of the closet about being women.

    When women-bashing becomes as recognized a term as gay bashing, you can use that metaphor.

  292. "he" is not gender-neutral by mackyrae · · Score: 1

    Archaic? No way in hell. Re-read what you wrote. Only the 19th century? "They" was in use as a singular gender-neutral pronoun 400 years before that! I'm pretty sure I said "they or ze" didn't I? Though, ya know, learning the term "ze" sure does make sense what with all the openly transgender people out there...

    --
    look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    1. Re:"he" is not gender-neutral by poofmeisterp · · Score: 1

      but but but but but...... I have a comment to the parent of your reply!!! I do I do!!! lol

      --
      *Ahem* As I stand on my pedestal of deep and multi-dimensional understanding of the universe and all of its fundamental operatives, I will tell you, quite clearly if I may add, that no one has EVER heard the term "woman-bashing" or "women-bashing" before. Ever. Thank you all, and have a pleasant day.
      --

      I love it when people make statements using the declaration of truth to DIRECTLY point out the falsehood of it in and of itself. Amazing. A-freaking-mazing.

  293. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by stdarg · · Score: 1

    People need to let go of the idea that racism has to be obviously self-interested or malicious in order to exist.

    Are you ready to say that racists are not self-interested or malicious? I doubt it. You probably want to keep the connotation of racist as-is because the word has power as-is.

    That's not twirling their moustaches and hoping to screw over black people; it's just taking advantage of a racially biased system.

    I'm glad you see that they're not being malicious but I don't understand how you make the leap that the system is racially biased. Wells Fargo is a prominent part OF the system, and we can probably conclude the same non-racism of each other member, so how is the system racially biased? I agree that the outcome of the system is racially skewed, but as is so commonly said here on slashdot, correlation is not causation. It's trivial to think of other issues that could be affecting the outcome rather than assuming there is racism within the particular system we're talking about (home loans).

    Some possible reasons are racist -- you could say blacks just aren't as capable so they have worse outcomes. Other reasons are not racist -- blacks are caught in a cycle of poverty and poor education, it's not inherent in blacks but just circumstance. Whether you accept a racist or a non-racist reason, it has nothing to do with the home loan system. It's an external factor. I mean, I'm not saying it's either of those, but don't you admit that it's possible that it's not the home loan system that is racist? That it could be another reason? That's what I meant by faith vs. science. People like you say "The disparity exists so the system in question is racist, we're not going to even entertain any other possibilities."

    In my opinion, any algorithm you come up with to assess risk is going to give higher risk to blacks, even if race itself is not an input. I mean blacks are disproportionately poor, disproportionately have criminal records, etc. Of course they're going to be disproportionately given subprime loans.

    The thing with institutional racism is that it exists without anybody needing to have consciously discriminatory attitudes at all.

    I haven't thought it out entirely, but I'm going to assert that it's not possible to have discriminatory attitudes that are not conscious. To me, that's because part of the definition of racism is intent, so I doubt you'll agree with me.

    Take an example like drug sentencing laws, a common target for accusations of institutional racism. Do you really think it's possible, granting that there is racism encoded in the laws, that the dude who proposed a particular law is NOT consciously racist? I just don't see how that would work. "Hmm, I'm going to propose that this drug, disproportionately used by blacks, should be punished 10 times as harshly as this equivalent drug that's not used by blacks. That's totally coincidental, I'm definitely not racist."

    (By the way I do think there is institutional racism in drug laws -- just not the home loan system.)

  294. Girls, Girls, Girls! by triso · · Score: 1

    Anyone who calls females "girls" and not "ladies," "trolops," "bitches," "hos" or "wenches" is obviously a pedophile and deserves to be denounced to the authorities.

    1. Re:Girls, Girls, Girls! by triso · · Score: 1

      Anyone who leaves their computer on, without logging out, during a big party at their home deserves to have their reputation ruined.

    2. Re:Girls, Girls, Girls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I lol'd.

  295. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

    I mean, you're essentially saying you don't believe in institutional racism -- specifically a set of rules or a social system that seems equal but results in racially biased outcomes for non-legitimate reasons. But you don't need Klansmen to make something work that way; and just because institutions are racist, doesn't mean anybody needs to be stoned to death or agonize in unbearable guilt. It just means that non-justified reasons for racially biased outcomes should be fixed whenever possible.

    So--

    Are you ready to say that racists are not self-interested or malicious? I doubt it. You probably want to keep the connotation of racist as-is because the word has power as-is.

    Of course racists are malicious (though not necessarily any more self-interested than anybody else; racism can work against people's self-interest, as argued by e.g. Tim Wise).
    But with institutional racism, it's the system itself that is racist, even if none of the people involved are consciously biased. Think of it like the way a properly functioning market economy works to assign "correct" prices to commodities--none of the people involved are doing anything but trying to get the best deal for themselves, but by their collective action they achieve a very interesting unintentional result--just so, people can build systems that are intended to be fair, but (due to inadequate information, unconscious bias, historical artifact, or many other possible reasons) wind up treating people of color unfairly.

    Which is besides the point at WF, since individuals there clearly were racist (I don't know what other conclusion we can draw from emails referring to "mud people"). But the institutional-racism part is that it was a scam specifically directed against people who were vulnerable because of their race (and correspondingly their lack of social networks and information about their qualifications for prime loans). Remember we're controlling for other factors here; these were black people who based on the lending algorithms should've gotten prime but were given subprime loans instead. And they fall for it because black communities don't have the same institutional knowledge of mortgages etc. that white families do; many of these people couldn't ask a parent or an uncle or whatever whether they were getting a fair deal, because those people wouldn't know (while they would be more likely to be able to provide guidance for white borrowers).

    As for drug laws, I suppose I'd entertain the possibility that politicians proposed laws without having conscious racially discriminatory intent. I'm more interested in the race differential in policy enforcement and conviction rates for the same drugs, like pot.
    But let's take a more interesting example -- legacy college admissions. I'm not talking about "daddy's name is on the library," just that many schools give preference to family members of alumni. That's definitely not a conscious attempt to be racist; it's intended to be a nice thing to keep family traditions intact, etc. But those alumni families are going to be disproportionately white -- so by giving preference to this category, you're tilting the scales away from people of color (and poorer people generally), meaning that an otherwise equally-qualified applicant is at a disadvantage competing for the same spot. Nobody intends to discriminate against black people; it just happens, as a product of how the rest of the system is set up. The result, though, is a disproportionate barrier to entry for people of color -- quite literally a grandfather clause. I don't know what else to call it than racist when people of one race, through no fault of their own, have a harder time competing for the same goal.

    Anyway, a response to this --

    "The disparity exists so the system in question is racist, we're not going to even entertain any other possibilities."

    Essentia

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  296. an sexism exist in a meritocracy? by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

    I think there are two kinds of sexism. First can be categorized as general rudeness/social immaturity exhibited by young males, often longing for female attention. The second kind if more dangerous, it is the kind of ingrained sexism in an all-boys club setting with an unspoken glass celling. Luckely, I believe the second kind is largely not present in FS development. Generally speaking you can not buy high status with money or good looks, or poweful parents, social connections or a stack of PH.D diplomas. The barrier of entry is comically low and what counts is how well you can code and interact with other team members.

    --
    US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    1. Re:an sexism exist in a meritocracy? by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      But very large quantities of the first is certainly harming. If ya go on IRC to get help, and you're hit on and get scared off, before you've even had a chance to write your first patch and get it reviewed...? I don't see how that's a good thing.

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
  297. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by stdarg · · Score: 1

    Thanks, I definitely understand your position better, and the points you brought up about WF are exactly what I was asking for in my original response.

    At least, I think that when there is a racial disparity in outcomes, there's a burden of investigation there to make sure that that difference really is legitimate, rather than the product of a system with its thumb on the scales.

    I agree with this, but it's very difficult in practice and that's why I approach these things with lots of skepticism. For instance, you mentioned about WF that "controlling for other factors here; these were black people who based on the lending algorithms should've gotten prime but were given subprime loans instead" -- what factors were controlled for? You imply that the strength of knowledgeable support networks was NOT controlled for ("they fall for it because black communities don't have the same institutional knowledge of mortgages"... if it had been controlled for, that wouldn't make a difference), so the question is, WHY wasn't it controlled for? It's certainly not an inherent property of race, right? So they're excluding certain factors from being used as statistical controls. If you exclude enough of these factors, then of course you'll find racism, though in reality, at this point the strongest statement is "There was a difference in outcome based on race AND the strength/existence of networks of financial knowledge" (and who knows what else they excluded from control).

    Also, I'm curious about these two statements.

    Statement 1:

    I don't know what else to call it than racist when people of one race, through no fault of their own, have a harder time competing for the same goal.

    Statement 2:

    That doesn't mean any system that has racially disparate outcomes is necessarily racist;

    Are you saying that there are times when the race has a legitimate fault of its own, and that's the time when the disparate outcomes are not necessarily racist?

    Are you just callings things like the country music self-selection thing "faults", or are you talking about what might be more traditionally considered a fault, like an actual physical, mental, behavioral, or other type of problem? Are you saying that the faults are tied to race, or just coincidental with certain races?

    If not, what is your criteria for determining whether the racially disparate outcomes are racist? You seem to be throwing intent out the window, so what's left if you assume no actual racial differences, and also disregard intent? I guess there's still disparate outcomes as a function of pure chance...

  298. Re:Words stuffed into our mouths by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

    I approach these things with lots of skepticism

    I think that's a perfectly fair position. Skepticism can be dangerous, in that it can discourage one from viewing social structures through the eyes of the ones they negatively affect (which is eye-opening, though I'm overusing that organ), but it ain't right to degenerate into mau-mauing or self-hatred on account of privilege.

    controlling for other factors here

    I see how this could be misleading; I was using the term a bit more loosely than that. This isn't a proper scientific study, of course; even 'natural experiment' might be giving it airs... I just mean that, per the official lending algorithm, these are people who should've gotten prime loans. They didn't, which indicates (1) that something outside the official algorithm was involved, and (2) that obvious confounding factors which frequently track with race, such as poverty, prison records, unreliable credit and work histories, etc., can't bear the weight of explaining the different treatment, in so much as these are all probably included in any sane credit-risk algorithm. So, while an average black person is more likely to be a worse credit risk than an average white person (mainly because of racially-correlated class issues), the comparison isn't with the overall racial average, but with people that the algorithm says were qualified.
    From that, I don't see a conflict between speculation (can't dignify it as more than that) about social networks' and family networks' knowledge of credit, while saying that the algorithm-relevant factors were comparable.

    Are you saying that there are times when the race has a legitimate fault of its own, and that's the time when the disparate outcomes are not necessarily racist?

    Well, there are times that people have legitimate faults, which may be particularly prevalent within one race or another. Perfectly justifiable/reasonable lending algorithms probably do make it harder for The Average Black Person to get a prime mortgage. On the one hand, this is reasonable, to the extent that it reflects The Average Black Person being less likely to repay the loan. On the other hand, *that* fact is due to fallout from other problems affecting the black community (greater unemployment, wage inequalities, differential access to education thus careers, etc.); to the extent that's an underlying racial disparity in our society, it would indicate that society's institutions are racist (/sexist/classist/etc). So I don't at all think it's suspect for a company to use statistical models to give better loan terms to people more likely to repay; but I do think it's an indictment of our society that black people might on the whole be less likely to repay. It's both fair, and not, to take those factors in isolation in the derived case.
    Rather than "inconsistent," I prefer to think of this as "nuanced" :)

    What I'm really trying to point towards is a view of racism that's more complex than the "racism = klansmen, racism BAD!" view that most of us white people pick up as our main thoughts on the topic. Klansmen are bad, of course. But there's a whole range of racist behaviors, institutions, and cultural standards, many of which are subconscious (discomfort around people of different races, ferinstance, which can lead to things like jury biases, hiring biases...); some of which are perfectly understandable[1]; some of which are not even intentional, or not the conscious intent of any one person. Sometimes a racist system manifests itself more in terms of privileges accorded to one race but denied to another (obligatory famous essay, which is insightful if flawed). And I think that it is both fair and unfair to separate individual aspects of a system/set of institutions as racist, when the non-racist institutions are probably influenced by racially-motivated factors. The world is pr

    --
    Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  299. 1.5% is a problem by Benfea · · Score: 1

    If 1.5% were the norm in technical fields, then there wouldn't be such a problem, but the norm for technical fields is around 25 to 30 percent. Sexism isn't the only possible explanation for that particular numerical anomaly, but it is the most obvious and consistent with past instances of similar anomalies.

    If the sample size were very small, say if there were less than 100 FOSS developers in the world, you could explain it away by saying the 1.5% number were based on a statistically insignificant sample. However I'm pretty sure the 1.5% number comes from a much larger sample size.

    If the 1.5% number existed because a large number of female FOSS developers were deliberately misrepresenting their gender you might have a case. Unfortunately, most of the explanations of why female FOSS developers would choose to misrepresent their gender suggest an environment that is hostile to females, which lends credence to the sexism charge.

    I am not a FOSS developer, so I will not say conclusively whether or not the FOSS community is sexist, but if the 1.5% number doesn't give members of that community reason to pause and reflect, then something is very, very wrong. At the very least they should be trying to find out why that number is so much lower than the tech community in general.

  300. Re:Odd, or typical, that you fail to get it comple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are clearly insane.

  301. Sexism is overrated. by flajann · · Score: 1
    I've been a software developer for 30 years now, and I can tell you first hand the number of women software developers I've encountered over that time I could count on one hand. And probably with a finger or two left over.

    Now enter FOSS. I can't recall encountering a single female FOSS developer. Ever.

    Nobody turns you down from being a FOSS developer if you can do the work. Just DO IT. 'Nuff said. The rest will attend to itself.

    Now, as far as sexism in general, us men get a tough break. We're considered less than human; expendable. Who gets drafted? When they talk about causalities among the civilian population, they usually speak in terms of "women and children." What about the *men*? Don't they matter? I guess not.

    Sexism floats both ways. Women will talk about men as "objects of desire" as much as men speak of women as the same. Yet, when a man does it, it's called "sexism". What is it called when women does it? Maybe I should go to a male revue and ask the ladies there.

    So why do we have this double standard? Where did that come from? It's rather silly, really.

    Now, having said that, there's another issue afoot. The extreme asymmetry of the number of women who participate in software development period, let alone FOSS. It's really sad in this day and age where nearly all barriers to women have been eliminated.

    The article I read here did not cite any specific examples of sexism, but just whined about them. I think many things that gets called "sexism" isn't really. Especially when women do the *same thing themselves* in respect to men.

    It's called human nature, and it has its evolutionary antecedents. Live with it. Enjoy it. Love it. And stop bitching about it.

    If a woman is denied entry into the FOSS arena just for being a woman, that's one thing. But if someone makes an off-color statement, it's really not worth getting your nickers in a twist about it, right? Right. Because women make as many, if not more off-color statements about us men when we're not around to hear them -- and even sometimes when we are. Funny how no one brings the house down about that. Men are people too, you know, just in case you forgot.