Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Carol Moore dc

On 9/9/2014 7:51 PM, LB wrote:
I'm going to keep at it, for now. Honestly, I'm tired of it being a 
mostly internally discussed problem... Perhaps I'll change my mind at 
some point, but that's my thinking on it at this time.


Lightbreather
You are braver than I!  On the other hand this is what 
[[User:Jayen466|Andreas]]  wrote when I complained the woman editor was 
being harassed off line:


/Criticising the quality of an editor's work, whether here or 
elsewhere, is not harassment. This is not a private project, but a 
public one, with a significant impact on public life. Any such public 
project should be prepared to be criticised. If someone writes nonsense 
in a science article read and relied on by a million people a year, that 
is a matter of public interest, just like stories like 
[http://twkozlowski.net/the-pot-and-the-kettle-the-wikimedia-way/ this], 
[http://twkozlowski.net/paid-editing-thrives-in-the-heart-of-wikipedia/ 
this], 
[http://www.salon.com/2013/05/17/revenge_ego_and_the_corruption_of_wikipedia/ 
this], 
[http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-the-pr-industry-buying-influence-over-wikipedia 
this] or 
[http://www.dailydot.com/politics/croatian-wikipedia-fascist-takeover-controversy-right-wing/ 
this]. If you would like to curtail editors' freedom to speak out about 
Wikipedia's failings in public, this in itself will be a media story, 
and rightly so. Such ideas belong to places like Azerbaijan and North Korea.


/Thus one would think quoting nasty sexist things, especially when an 
editor's name not mentioned should be ok. This really was a test case, 
wasn't it? (Or not in a community that still applies double standards to 
male vs. female actions.)

/
/Here's the link to the ANI in question:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/IncidentArchive835#Harassment


On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Carol Moore dc 
carolmoor...@verizon.net mailto:carolmoor...@verizon.net wrote:


Frankly, given the hostility to the Gender Gap project, I have to
wonder about this Hashtag effort.

Lightbreather quoted some obnoxious guy statements a month  ago
out of her own account and was roundly criticized. Forum shopping
and canvassing issues were raised while others applauded it. See

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Jimbo_Wales/Archive_170#Fed_up_with_the_status_quo...

I personally wouldn't do it because the wrong Admin who was
friends with people you quoted (or people who don't like you)
probably would get you blocked for weeks or months at a time. So
it could be a way to trap editors whose twitter accounts are
somehow linked to their user names.

I know at least one guy at an ANI got away with criticizing a
woman editor on her editing at a number of off wiki-sites.  But
that doesn't mean any of us would get away with it.

 And this also can be turned about the Gender Gap Project
#GenderGapStupidity or whatever.

So unless there was some community consensus on an appropriate way
to do this, I would tread carefully...

CM



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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Nathan
On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 8:46 AM, Carol Moore dc carolmoor...@verizon.net
wrote:

  On 9/9/2014 7:51 PM, LB wrote:

 I'm going to keep at it, for now. Honestly, I'm tired of it being a mostly
 internally discussed problem... Perhaps I'll change my mind at some point,
 but that's my thinking on it at this time.

  Lightbreather

 You are braver than I!  On the other hand this is what
 [[User:Jayen466|Andreas]]  wrote when I complained the woman editor was
 being harassed off line:



 *Criticising the quality of an editor's work, whether here or
 elsewhere, is not harassment. This is not a private project, but a public
 one, with a significant impact on public life. Any such public project
 should be prepared to be criticised. If someone writes nonsense in a
 science article read and relied on by a million people a year, that is a
 matter of public interest, just like stories like
 [http://twkozlowski.net/the-pot-and-the-kettle-the-wikimedia-way/
 http://twkozlowski.net/the-pot-and-the-kettle-the-wikimedia-way/ this],
 [http://twkozlowski.net/paid-editing-thrives-in-the-heart-of-wikipedia/
 http://twkozlowski.net/paid-editing-thrives-in-the-heart-of-wikipedia/
 this],
 [http://www.salon.com/2013/05/17/revenge_ego_and_the_corruption_of_wikipedia/
 http://www.salon.com/2013/05/17/revenge_ego_and_the_corruption_of_wikipedia/
 this],
 [http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-the-pr-industry-buying-influence-over-wikipedia
 http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-the-pr-industry-buying-influence-over-wikipedia
 this] or
 [http://www.dailydot.com/politics/croatian-wikipedia-fascist-takeover-controversy-right-wing/
 http://www.dailydot.com/politics/croatian-wikipedia-fascist-takeover-controversy-right-wing/
 this]. If you would like to curtail editors' freedom to speak out about
 Wikipedia's failings in public, this in itself will be a media story, and
 rightly so. Such ideas belong to places like Azerbaijan and North Korea. *Thus
 one would think quoting nasty sexist things, especially when an editor's
 name not mentioned should be ok. This really was a test case, wasn't it?
 (Or not in a community that still applies double standards to male vs.
 female actions.)

 Here's the link to the ANI in question:

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/IncidentArchive835#Harassment



Where were the sexist comments? The user complaining of harassment and the
user accused of harassment were both women, and I see no comments about
gender in either the AN/I or the extensive editor review. The harassment
complained of was the persistence of an editor in following another editor
around and pointing out errors in many of her articles, and the
argumentative and derisive attitude of the first towards the latter.
Andreas' point is that criticism, by itself, is not harassment. Many agreed
with the criticism but advised the critic that she needed an attitude
adjustment. At that point she disengaged.

So it's a problem when we conflate circumstances which do not implicate
gender or sexism with those that do. Calling this an example of sexism
muddies the waters, particularly when there are many examples that are
perfectly clear cut.  It *is* an example of the hassle and angry debate
involved in contributing to Wikipedia, though, and I can certainly see how
that would drive all sorts of people away from the project.
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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Sarah Stierch
Hi. Some people can't speak up about what happened for legal reasons.

I do think there is a double standard. But I have before my involvement in
wiki. Living in the US it's a way of life.

Some women who were impacted by those posts were harassed by people
involved way prior to making their own minor and harmless in the end game
errors which got them in trouble. Women just did not take action or make
it public. No one should have to post on a public website that they have
been sexually harassed to get help. And bad people on the internet are
common is the general response.

There are also male staff members who did things considered illegal in the
US courts who still have their jobs (some don't work there anymore but it
shocked many of us women they were allowed to stay so long given their
behaviors). Amazing how that works.

But, some of us can't and are afraid to talk about it. Some of us just want
closure but the trolls and internet won't give it to us. (And it's not just
me...)

And no I am not elaborating on or offlist. So don't ask. I gave up fighting
after I lost my job. So I commend those who still care.

I love the Twitter feed, by the way.

Sarah
On Sep 10, 2014 8:41 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:




 On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 8:46 AM, Carol Moore dc carolmoor...@verizon.net
 wrote:

  On 9/9/2014 7:51 PM, LB wrote:

 I'm going to keep at it, for now. Honestly, I'm tired of it being a
 mostly internally discussed problem... Perhaps I'll change my mind at some
 point, but that's my thinking on it at this time.

  Lightbreather

 You are braver than I!  On the other hand this is what
 [[User:Jayen466|Andreas]]  wrote when I complained the woman editor was
 being harassed off line:



 *Criticising the quality of an editor's work, whether here or
 elsewhere, is not harassment. This is not a private project, but a public
 one, with a significant impact on public life. Any such public project
 should be prepared to be criticised. If someone writes nonsense in a
 science article read and relied on by a million people a year, that is a
 matter of public interest, just like stories like
 [http://twkozlowski.net/the-pot-and-the-kettle-the-wikimedia-way/
 http://twkozlowski.net/the-pot-and-the-kettle-the-wikimedia-way/ this],
 [http://twkozlowski.net/paid-editing-thrives-in-the-heart-of-wikipedia/
 http://twkozlowski.net/paid-editing-thrives-in-the-heart-of-wikipedia/
 this],
 [http://www.salon.com/2013/05/17/revenge_ego_and_the_corruption_of_wikipedia/
 http://www.salon.com/2013/05/17/revenge_ego_and_the_corruption_of_wikipedia/
 this],
 [http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-the-pr-industry-buying-influence-over-wikipedia
 http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-the-pr-industry-buying-influence-over-wikipedia
 this] or
 [http://www.dailydot.com/politics/croatian-wikipedia-fascist-takeover-controversy-right-wing/
 http://www.dailydot.com/politics/croatian-wikipedia-fascist-takeover-controversy-right-wing/
 this]. If you would like to curtail editors' freedom to speak out about
 Wikipedia's failings in public, this in itself will be a media story, and
 rightly so. Such ideas belong to places like Azerbaijan and North Korea. 
 *Thus
 one would think quoting nasty sexist things, especially when an editor's
 name not mentioned should be ok. This really was a test case, wasn't it?
 (Or not in a community that still applies double standards to male vs.
 female actions.)

 Here's the link to the ANI in question:

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/IncidentArchive835#Harassment



 Where were the sexist comments? The user complaining of harassment and the
 user accused of harassment were both women, and I see no comments about
 gender in either the AN/I or the extensive editor review. The harassment
 complained of was the persistence of an editor in following another editor
 around and pointing out errors in many of her articles, and the
 argumentative and derisive attitude of the first towards the latter.
 Andreas' point is that criticism, by itself, is not harassment. Many agreed
 with the criticism but advised the critic that she needed an attitude
 adjustment. At that point she disengaged.

 So it's a problem when we conflate circumstances which do not implicate
 gender or sexism with those that do. Calling this an example of sexism
 muddies the waters, particularly when there are many examples that are
 perfectly clear cut.  It *is* an example of the hassle and angry debate
 involved in contributing to Wikipedia, though, and I can certainly see how
 that would drive all sorts of people away from the project.


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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Nathan
On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Hi. Some people can't speak up about what happened for legal reasons.

 I do think there is a double standard. But I have before my involvement in
 wiki. Living in the US it's a way of life.

 Some women who were impacted by those posts were harassed by people
 involved way prior to making their own minor and harmless in the end game
 errors which got them in trouble. Women just did not take action or make
 it public. No one should have to post on a public website that they have
 been sexually harassed to get help. And bad people on the internet are
 common is the general response.

 There are also male staff members who did things considered illegal in the
 US courts who still have their jobs (some don't work there anymore but it
 shocked many of us women they were allowed to stay so long given their
 behaviors). Amazing how that works.

 But, some of us can't and are afraid to talk about it. Some of us just
 want closure but the trolls and internet won't give it to us. (And it's not
 just me...)

 And no I am not elaborating on or offlist. So don't ask. I gave up
 fighting after I lost my job. So I commend those who still care.

 I love the Twitter feed, by the way.

 Sarah
 On Sep 10, 2014 8:41 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote



Hi Sarah, I'm sorry if I was unclear. I was understanding Carol as saying
that there were sexist comments in the ANI she linked (where Andreas'
quoted comment was found). I read the entire AN/I thread and the editor
review and found none.

Of course I realize that there are many, many instances of terrible sexual
harassment on the Internet and throughout the history of Wikipedia. My
point about muddying the waters is that these examples are enough to
convince anyone open to being convinced that there is a problem. It is
unnecessary to attach these real issues to examples that don't reflect
sexism or gender-related harassment.

That said, even though I don't see sexism or gender in the example, it is a
good example of the spiteful, bitter, battlefield atmosphere that
characterizes disputes on Wikipedia.
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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Sarah Stierch
Thanks Nathan. I do concur that harassment to the level myself, Carol and
other very active outspoken women have experienced on/off wiki is not the
standard experience for every woman who lines up to click edit.

It sucks that it happens. But I also always remind people - unless you are
editing controversial subjects or pose a direct threat to the patriarchy
you won't get messed with. Or at least not much.

Just keep your head down and write about knitting and women scientists. You
will be just fine...

(With slight sarcasm :)

Sarah
On Sep 10, 2014 9:09 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:




 On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Hi. Some people can't speak up about what happened for legal reasons.

 I do think there is a double standard. But I have before my involvement
 in wiki. Living in the US it's a way of life.

 Some women who were impacted by those posts were harassed by people
 involved way prior to making their own minor and harmless in the end game
 errors which got them in trouble. Women just did not take action or make
 it public. No one should have to post on a public website that they have
 been sexually harassed to get help. And bad people on the internet are
 common is the general response.

 There are also male staff members who did things considered illegal in
 the US courts who still have their jobs (some don't work there anymore but
 it shocked many of us women they were allowed to stay so long given their
 behaviors). Amazing how that works.

 But, some of us can't and are afraid to talk about it. Some of us just
 want closure but the trolls and internet won't give it to us. (And it's not
 just me...)

 And no I am not elaborating on or offlist. So don't ask. I gave up
 fighting after I lost my job. So I commend those who still care.

 I love the Twitter feed, by the way.

 Sarah
 On Sep 10, 2014 8:41 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote



 Hi Sarah, I'm sorry if I was unclear. I was understanding Carol as saying
 that there were sexist comments in the ANI she linked (where Andreas'
 quoted comment was found). I read the entire AN/I thread and the editor
 review and found none.

 Of course I realize that there are many, many instances of terrible sexual
 harassment on the Internet and throughout the history of Wikipedia. My
 point about muddying the waters is that these examples are enough to
 convince anyone open to being convinced that there is a problem. It is
 unnecessary to attach these real issues to examples that don't reflect
 sexism or gender-related harassment.

 That said, even though I don't see sexism or gender in the example, it is
 a good example of the spiteful, bitter, battlefield atmosphere that
 characterizes disputes on Wikipedia.


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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread LB
And of course, that is the nub of the problem. Women shouldn't have to keep
their heads down and write about acceptable and uncontroversial things to
avoid getting harassed. (Also, I'm not sure even editing women scientists
would be safe.)

Lightbreather

On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 9:15 AM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Thanks Nathan. I do concur that harassment to the level myself, Carol and
 other very active outspoken women have experienced on/off wiki is not the
 standard experience for every woman who lines up to click edit.

 It sucks that it happens. But I also always remind people - unless you are
 editing controversial subjects or pose a direct threat to the patriarchy
 you won't get messed with. Or at least not much.

 Just keep your head down and write about knitting and women scientists.
 You will be just fine...

 (With slight sarcasm :)

 Sarah

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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-10 Thread Sarah Stierch
I agree. But, it hasn't been serving those women who don't very well. The
NFL is appearing to have a better track record right now than the Wikimedia
community... in handling harassers and that's not saying much at all :)

Sarah

On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 9:36 AM, LB lightbreath...@gmail.com wrote:

 And of course, that is the nub of the problem. Women shouldn't have to
 keep their heads down and write about acceptable and uncontroversial things
 to avoid getting harassed. (Also, I'm not sure even editing women
 scientists would be safe.)

 Lightbreather

 On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 9:15 AM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Thanks Nathan. I do concur that harassment to the level myself, Carol and
 other very active outspoken women have experienced on/off wiki is not the
 standard experience for every woman who lines up to click edit.

 It sucks that it happens. But I also always remind people - unless you
 are editing controversial subjects or pose a direct threat to the
 patriarchy you won't get messed with. Or at least not much.

 Just keep your head down and write about knitting and women scientists.
 You will be just fine...

 (With slight sarcasm :)

 Sarah


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-- 

Sarah Stierch

-

Diverse and engaging consulting for your organization.

www.sarahstierch.com
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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-09 Thread Kathleen McCook
The *#WhyIStayed hashtag shows also applies to this discussion. *

On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 6:05 AM, Gender Gap saido...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hey, I've been following this list for a while. I'm pretty sick of the
 constant sexism on Wikipedia, and depressed because it's not just a few
 users, but seen in the opinions and suggestions of so many. I've started a
 twitter account (https://twitter.com/SaidOnWP) to give some examples of
 what I think the most egregious things said are. This will probably upset
 some users, especially users that meant well, but many things that are said
 that are well-meaning have some offensive underlying ideas.

 I want to show the mass of evidence that sexism exists on WP in a venue
 where it doesn't have to be interrupted by users demanding proof. I know
 that this is more confrontational than some users will want, but I'm sick
 of the anti-interventionalist sentiment from different quarters in WP, with
 the attitude oh! well it's up to what the community wants...! This is a
 problem with the community and I hope to shed some light on it.

 I'm going to be posting things every day and have enough content planned
 for about a month, repost, send me examples or follow my twitter. I'm only
 posting content from this year, and include analyses, discussions,
 commentary and incidents.

 #saidonWP

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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-09 Thread Carol Moore dc
Frankly, given the hostility to the Gender Gap project, I have to wonder 
about this Hashtag effort.


Lightbreather quoted some obnoxious guy statements a month  ago out of 
her own account and was roundly criticized. Forum shopping and 
canvassing issues were raised while others applauded it. See 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Jimbo_Wales/Archive_170#Fed_up_with_the_status_quo...


I personally wouldn't do it because the wrong Admin who was friends with 
people you quoted (or people who don't like you) probably would get you 
blocked for weeks or months at a time. So it could be a way to trap 
editors whose twitter accounts are somehow linked to their user names.


I know at least one guy at an ANI got away with criticizing a woman 
editor on her editing at a number of off wiki-sites.  But that doesn't 
mean any of us would get away with it.


 And this also can be turned about the Gender Gap Project 
#GenderGapStupidity or whatever.


So unless there was some community consensus on an appropriate way to do 
this, I would tread carefully...


CM

On 9/9/2014 6:05 AM, Gender Gap wrote:
Hey, I've been following this list for a while. I'm pretty sick of the 
constant sexism on Wikipedia, and depressed because it's not just a 
few users, but seen in the opinions and suggestions of so many. I've 
started a twitter account (https://twitter.com/SaidOnWP) to give some 
examples of what I think the most egregious things said are. This will 
probably upset some users, especially users that meant well, but many 
things that are said that are well-meaning have some offensive 
underlying ideas.


I want to show the mass of evidence that sexism exists on WP in a 
venue where it doesn't have to be interrupted by users demanding 
proof. I know that this is more confrontational than some users will 
want, but I'm sick of the anti-interventionalist sentiment from 
different quarters in WP, with the attitude oh! well it's up to what 
the community wants...! This is a problem with the community and I 
hope to shed some light on it.


I'm going to be posting things every day and have enough content 
planned for about a month, repost, send me examples or follow my 
twitter. I'm only posting content from this year, and include 
analyses, discussions, commentary and incidents.


#saidonWP


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Re: [Gendergap] Shining light on the gender gap by Twitter

2014-09-09 Thread LB
I'm going to keep at it, for now. Honestly, I'm tired of it being a mostly
internally discussed problem... Perhaps I'll change my mind at some point,
but that's my thinking on it at this time.

Lightbreather

On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Carol Moore dc carolmoor...@verizon.net
wrote:

  Frankly, given the hostility to the Gender Gap project, I have to wonder
 about this Hashtag effort.

 Lightbreather quoted some obnoxious guy statements a month  ago out of her
 own account and was roundly criticized. Forum shopping and canvassing
 issues were raised while others applauded it. See
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Jimbo_Wales/Archive_170#Fed_up_with_the_status_quo
 ...

 I personally wouldn't do it because the wrong Admin who was friends with
 people you quoted (or people who don't like you) probably would get you
 blocked for weeks or months at a time. So it could be a way to trap editors
 whose twitter accounts are somehow linked to their user names.

 I know at least one guy at an ANI got away with criticizing a woman editor
 on her editing at a number of off wiki-sites.  But that doesn't mean any of
 us would get away with it.

  And this also can be turned about the Gender Gap Project
 #GenderGapStupidity or whatever.

 So unless there was some community consensus on an appropriate way to do
 this, I would tread carefully...

 CM


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