By Jake Edge
February 16, 2011
The gender imbalance in the free software world is largely mirrored in the
related "open technology and culture" communities. Various efforts have
been tried over the years to try to rebalance things, with varying degrees
of success. The newly formed Ada
Initiative is taking a different tack than those previous efforts:
raising money to support
full-time staff, along with various projects, rather than going the traditional
all-volunteer route.
Valerie Aurora and Mary Gardiner, who are longtime advocates and organizers
for "women in open source" projects, launched the Ada Initiative (TAI) on
February 7 to "concentrate on focused, direct action programs, including
recruitment and training for women, education for community members,
and working with companies and projects to improve their outreach to
women". While the first steps for the initiative are somewhat
bureaucratic—filling out paperwork to put the organization on a sound
legal footing along with raising the funds that it needs—TAI has some
concrete plans for projects that it will be
working on.
At the top of the priority list, according to Aurora, is a survey that will
measure the participation of women in the open technology and culture
communities. This would be something of an update to the FLOSSPOLS survey that was done in 2006.
TAI is working on a methodology for the survey, so that it can be repeated
over time to gauge progress. The survey is meant to answer a very
fundamental question, Aurora said: "How
bad is the problem, and is what we are doing making things better? If
we can't answer these questions, we can't do a good job."
Another project in the works is "First Patch Week", which will be an
effort to pair companies and projects with female developers to help get the
new developers over the first hurdle in joining a development community:
submitting their first patch. The idea is that the existing community
supplies mentors who have been trained by TAI to bring these new developers
along, and it will be beneficial to both sides: "Participating in First Patch Week is an excellent
opportunity to get new developers working on your project (with the
potential of hiring them later on, of course)." Like the survey,
First Patch Week is going to take some time to get up and running, but once
past the organizational set-up phase, TAI intends to put in "several
months
of full time effort" to find the right projects and train mentors.
So far, the response to the initiative has been "amazing",
Aurora said, with
inquiries from "enormous international corporations" as well
as community organizations and individuals. TAI is in discussions with
multiple sponsors, but it is really looking for more than money:
At this point, we are focusing on sponsors who want to do more than
write a check: donate engineer time, help organize meetings, run
scholarships, give us advice on fundraising, or otherwise help us with
things money can't buy.
Linux Australia is the first TAI
sponsor, and is providing some general sponsorship money that Aurora
described as a "do the right thing" sponsorship. Because the
organization is so small, general sponsorships, rather than those focused
on a specific project, are what it is looking for. There's still plenty of
room to become a sponsor, but "if your organization would like to be a founding
member of the Ada
Initiative, now is the time to be talking to us."
Discussions on the supporters
mailing list have focused on individual contributions. While that is not
the kind of funding TAI is looking for in the long term, it would help with
the start-up process, so there will be some means of doing that (possibly
through a Kickstarter campaign) coming soon. But there are ways to help
beyond just the financial:
The best way to support the Ada Initiative right now is to encourage
other people in your organization to support us. Right now we have
people helping by writing checks, but also by offering meeting space,
travel funding, pro bono legal advice, event planning, and the like.
If you want to you help, you should also sign up for one of our myriad
announcement channels - Twitter, blog, etc. - and we will make
announcements as we have opportunities for people to contribute.
It is clear from the FAQ that
TAI hopes that fundraising will provide the financial resources to allow
the organization to dig into projects that are difficult or impossible for
all-volunteer organizations to take on. By providing salaries to its
employees (eventually,
anyway), those people
can concentrate solely on the projects, rather than having to
work on them in "evening and weekend" time. It is a different
style than that taken by existing organizations, such as LinuxChix and AussieChix, but one that TAI
believes will be beneficial to the whole ecosystem, as Aurora pointed out:
In general, our theory is that the majority of people in open
technology and culture really want women to be involved and welcome -
they just don't know how to do it. Our goal is to give these people
the information and opportunity to accomplish this. Whenever we do a
project, the project itself is just the first step. Documenting what
we did and teaching other people to reproduce it is just as important.
The announcement was met with an "excited and supportive"
reception, which, along with the sponsors that seem to be lining up, should
bode well for TAI. According to Aurora, the initiative expects to be fully
funded and working full-time on its projects by July. That means we should start
seeing concrete results from those efforts in the latter half of the
year. Gardiner and Aurora created TAI because it was "the right
thing" to do, Aurora said, and they have been pleasantly surprised
with the reaction from the rest of the open technology and culture communities:
What we didn't realize was the intensity of frustrated
desire that many people have about helping women in open technology
and culture. People desperately want to do something about the
injustice and imbalance they see around themselves every day in the
tech community. We're finally giving people an outlet for all that
energy.
The Ada Initiative—named for Countess Ada
Lovelace, "the world's first woman open source
programmer"—is a very interesting experiment. It will not
only provide ways to increase the participation of women in free software
and related fields, which is worthwhile goal in itself, but it may also
provide an example of how to fund
organizations focused on other specific initiatives within our
communities.
There are a number of similar kinds of organizations in our
community, the foundations for Linux, GNOME, and Apache for example, but
those tend to be larger, umbrella organizations, whereas TAI is
tightly focused on a well-defined, existing problem. There are
certainly other technical and social problems in our communities that might
benefit from a similar approach.
More
women in open technology and culture would be a fabulous outcome from this
experiment, and finding more ways to fund interesting projects would just
be icing on the cake.
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