Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-18 Thread Sarah
On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 15:34, Ryan Kaldari rkald...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 The behavior you describe is all too common on Wikipedia (and even worse
 on Commons). I could quote some much more blatant examples than the one
 you cite, but I'll spare everyone the groans. I think the problem is
 that most guys do not understand that creating an unwanted sexualized
 environment is a form of sexism and an abuse of male privilege (and that
 it has a real effect on women's participation in the project). Indeed, I
 imagine some do not even comprehend the concept of unwanted sexualized
 environment. Perhaps it would be helpful to point them to:
 http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Sexualized_environment

 This reminds me of my unsuccessful attempt to get WP:HOTTIE deleted :(

 For the long term, we should think about trying to get wording added to
 either the Civility policy or the Harassment policy about offensive
 verbal comments and sexual innuendo.

Ryan, thanks for the link to the sexualized environment page.
http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Sexualized_environment Perhaps  the
best thing to do when we see these comments is just add a link to that
page.

I'd like to try to add something to the civility policy about sexual
innuendo. I think so long as it's low key we could manage that fairly
easily (famous last words).

Sarah

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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-18 Thread Andreas Kolbe
I've added sexual innuendo to the en:WP civility policy, under other uncivil 
behaviours:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3ACivilityaction=historysubmitdiff=419506099oldid=416379114

Andreas


--- On Fri, 18/3/11, Sarah slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:

 From: Sarah slimvir...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?
 To: Increasing female participation in Wikimedia projects 
 gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
 Date: Friday, 18 March, 2011, 13:53
 On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 15:34, Ryan
 Kaldari rkald...@wikimedia.org
 wrote:
  The behavior you describe is all too common on
 Wikipedia (and even worse
  on Commons). I could quote some much more blatant
 examples than the one
  you cite, but I'll spare everyone the groans. I think
 the problem is
  that most guys do not understand that creating an
 unwanted sexualized
  environment is a form of sexism and an abuse of male
 privilege (and that
  it has a real effect on women's participation in the
 project). Indeed, I
  imagine some do not even comprehend the concept of
 unwanted sexualized
  environment. Perhaps it would be helpful to point
 them to:
  http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Sexualized_environment
 
  This reminds me of my unsuccessful attempt to get
 WP:HOTTIE deleted :(
 
  For the long term, we should think about trying to get
 wording added to
  either the Civility policy or the Harassment policy
 about offensive
  verbal comments and sexual innuendo.
 
 Ryan, thanks for the link to the sexualized environment
 page.
 http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Sexualized_environment
 PerhapsĀ  the
 best thing to do when we see these comments is just add a
 link to that
 page.
 
 I'd like to try to add something to the civility policy
 about sexual
 innuendo. I think so long as it's low key we could manage
 that fairly
 easily (famous last words).
 
 Sarah
 
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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-18 Thread Fred Bauder

 However, I also do worry about double standards. For example, earlier
 somewhere someone suggested we visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ochre
 where a barebreasted woman was used to illustrate the use of it as a
 body paint in Africa. I made the point that I really would like to know
 if men were painted and if the penis also was painted on men. Something
 tells me under that rule someone might have jumped all over me for
 innuendo since innuendo is in the mind of the behold. I actually in my
 mind had a heavy innuendo intention, but objectively speaking it
 probably didn't look that way. Others might have seen it as more of an
 innuendo than even I meant.

 So bottom line, whether or not it's debated, i think a little more
 detail needs to be added to make it clear that strong and intentional
 innuendo is a problem.

Yes, sexual innuendo is a rather ambiguous term, although certain
expressions obviously fall within its definition, and not just in the
mind of the beholder.

Fred



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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-17 Thread Ryan Kaldari
The behavior you describe is all too common on Wikipedia (and even worse 
on Commons). I could quote some much more blatant examples than the one 
you cite, but I'll spare everyone the groans. I think the problem is 
that most guys do not understand that creating an unwanted sexualized 
environment is a form of sexism and an abuse of male privilege (and that 
it has a real effect on women's participation in the project). Indeed, I 
imagine some do not even comprehend the concept of unwanted sexualized 
environment. Perhaps it would be helpful to point them to: 
http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Sexualized_environment

This reminds me of my unsuccessful attempt to get WP:HOTTIE deleted :(

For the long term, we should think about trying to get wording added to 
either the Civility policy or the Harassment policy about offensive 
verbal comments and sexual innuendo.

Kaldari


On 3/17/11 2:15 PM, Sarah wrote:
 I saw an incident recently on WP that's fairly common, but it's not
 clear to me what we should do about it, if anything.

 A woman editor did something that a few male editors didn't like, and
 she was taken to task for it. In the course of the discussion, the
 Wikipedia biography of a woman was mentioned and linked to, and her
 photograph showed her as attractive. One of the men taking part in the
 discussion said something positive about the image -- then he added
 that policy prevented him from going into detail about his feelings
 about it. (I won't quote him so as not to identify him, but it was
 words to that effect.)

 It's a remark typical of young men, and he almost certainly intended
 no harm. But the effect on me as a reader was that it undermined the
 woman taking part in the discussion. She also felt that way, and said
 so. The response was that her objection was laughable.

 What should we do when we witness this kind of thing? I've never said
 anything in these situations, because I see them so often, and there's
 a risk of turning it into a dramafest. I also know that some people,
 men and women both, would say it's too minor a thing to comment on.

 So -- should we be saying something, and if so what and how, or is it
 best to ignore?

 Sarah

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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-17 Thread Fred Bauder
 I saw an incident recently on WP that's fairly common, but it's not
 clear to me what we should do about it, if anything.

 A woman editor did something that a few male editors didn't like, and
 she was taken to task for it. In the course of the discussion, the
 Wikipedia biography of a woman was mentioned and linked to, and her
 photograph showed her as attractive. One of the men taking part in the
 discussion said something positive about the image -- then he added
 that policy prevented him from going into detail about his feelings
 about it. (I won't quote him so as not to identify him, but it was
 words to that effect.)

 It's a remark typical of young men, and he almost certainly intended
 no harm. But the effect on me as a reader was that it undermined the
 woman taking part in the discussion. She also felt that way, and said
 so. The response was that her objection was laughable.

 What should we do when we witness this kind of thing? I've never said
 anything in these situations, because I see them so often, and there's
 a risk of turning it into a dramafest. I also know that some people,
 men and women both, would say it's too minor a thing to comment on.

 So -- should we be saying something, and if so what and how, or is it
 best to ignore?

 Sarah

Please look at Wikipedia:Revision_deletion#Criteria_for_redaction

particularly:

2. Grossly insulting, degrading, or offensive material that has little/no
encyclopedic or project value and/or violates our Biographies of living
people policy. This includes slurs, smears, and grossly offensive
material of little or no encyclopedic value, but not mere factual
statements, and not ordinary incivility, personal attacks or conduct
accusations. When attack pages or pages with grossly improper titles are
deleted, the page names may also be removed from the delete and page move
logs.

3. Purely disruptive material that is of little or no relevance or merit
to the project. This includes allegations, grossly inappropriate threats
or attacks, browser-crashing or malicious HTML, shock pages, phishing
pages, known virus proliferating pages, and links to web pages that
disparage or threaten some person or entity and serve no other valid
purpose, but not mere spam links.

but keep in mind:

A certain low degree of inappropriate or disruptive posting is normal
within a large community. In general, only material that meets the
criteria below should be deleted. Users should consider whether simply
reverting or ignoring would be sufficient in the circumstances. If
deletion is needed, only redact what is necessary (i.e. leave non-harmful
fields visible), and give a clear reason for the removal.

The community's decision was that RevisionDelete should not be used
without prior clear consensus for ordinary incivility, attacks, or for
claims of editorial misconduct. The wider community may need to fully
review these at the time and in future, even if offensive.

If whatever it is poses a risk of turning it into a dramafest it is not
within the normal range of inappropriate or disruptive posting, as in
this case there may be a need to not single out the offender, therefore
it may be useful to use Wikipedia mail to bring the matter to the
attention of OTRS, which is the people with the oversight tool. Even if
suppression is not appropriate deletion can still be done and a quiet and
private warning given. So, if it is serious, in your opinion, (tell them
why if you think it is) email User:Oversight

https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Special:EmailUser/Oversight

Fred



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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-17 Thread George Herbert
Just for information -

Whoever starts actioning this needs to be careful.  The community
lashbacks over trying to limit abusive behavior in other areas (the
civility arguments, etc) have been severe at times.

A lot of men will take That was sexist and is creating a hostile
environment, please stop to be a challenge and insult rather than
believe it.  If an offense was marginal, they may get others to
support that obstructionism.

This is not a Don't try to do this, it's a Be careful and aware.


-george

On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 6:59 PM, Ryan Kaldari rkald...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 Nice find Fred. I hadn't read those before. It sounds like revision
 deletion might be an option in more extreme cases.

 There was discussion recently about setting up a Gender issues
 noticeboard on English Wikipedia
 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Feminism#Gender_issues_noticeboard.3F),
 but no consensus was reached.

 Also, although it is not an official forum for such matters, some
 editors bring problematic cases to
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Feminism
 At least it's better than getting laughed at by going to
 Wikipedia:Wikiquette alerts.

 Kaldari


 On 3/17/11 6:04 PM, Fred Bauder wrote:
 I saw an incident recently on WP that's fairly common, but it's not
 clear to me what we should do about it, if anything.

 A woman editor did something that a few male editors didn't like, and
 she was taken to task for it. In the course of the discussion, the
 Wikipedia biography of a woman was mentioned and linked to, and her
 photograph showed her as attractive. One of the men taking part in the
 discussion said something positive about the image -- then he added
 that policy prevented him from going into detail about his feelings
 about it. (I won't quote him so as not to identify him, but it was
 words to that effect.)

 It's a remark typical of young men, and he almost certainly intended
 no harm. But the effect on me as a reader was that it undermined the
 woman taking part in the discussion. She also felt that way, and said
 so. The response was that her objection was laughable.

 What should we do when we witness this kind of thing? I've never said
 anything in these situations, because I see them so often, and there's
 a risk of turning it into a dramafest. I also know that some people,
 men and women both, would say it's too minor a thing to comment on.

 So -- should we be saying something, and if so what and how, or is it
 best to ignore?

 Sarah
 Please look at Wikipedia:Revision_deletion#Criteria_for_redaction

 particularly:

 2. Grossly insulting, degrading, or offensive material that has little/no
 encyclopedic or project value and/or violates our Biographies of living
 people policy. This includes slurs, smears, and grossly offensive
 material of little or no encyclopedic value, but not mere factual
 statements, and not ordinary incivility, personal attacks or conduct
 accusations. When attack pages or pages with grossly improper titles are
 deleted, the page names may also be removed from the delete and page move
 logs.

 3. Purely disruptive material that is of little or no relevance or merit
 to the project. This includes allegations, grossly inappropriate threats
 or attacks, browser-crashing or malicious HTML, shock pages, phishing
 pages, known virus proliferating pages, and links to web pages that
 disparage or threaten some person or entity and serve no other valid
 purpose, but not mere spam links.

 but keep in mind:

 A certain low degree of inappropriate or disruptive posting is normal
 within a large community. In general, only material that meets the
 criteria below should be deleted. Users should consider whether simply
 reverting or ignoring would be sufficient in the circumstances. If
 deletion is needed, only redact what is necessary (i.e. leave non-harmful
 fields visible), and give a clear reason for the removal.

 The community's decision was that RevisionDelete should not be used
 without prior clear consensus for ordinary incivility, attacks, or for
 claims of editorial misconduct. The wider community may need to fully
 review these at the time and in future, even if offensive.

 If whatever it is poses a risk of turning it into a dramafest it is not
 within the normal range of inappropriate or disruptive posting, as in
 this case there may be a need to not single out the offender, therefore
 it may be useful to use Wikipedia mail to bring the matter to the
 attention of OTRS, which is the people with the oversight tool. Even if
 suppression is not appropriate deletion can still be done and a quiet and
 private warning given. So, if it is serious, in your opinion, (tell them
 why if you think it is) email User:Oversight

 https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Special:EmailUser/Oversight

 Fred



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Re: [Gendergap] What to do about sexism when we see it on WP?

2011-03-17 Thread John Vandenberg
On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 12:59 PM, Ryan Kaldari rkald...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 Nice find Fred. I hadn't read those before. It sounds like revision
 deletion might be an option in more extreme cases.

Less extreme cases should be taken here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiquette_alerts

I agree with George that care is needed.  Progress will be made when
the more obvious etiquette issues are tackled first.  Reporting lots
of marginal offenses will result in a backlash.

--
John Vandenberg

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