There's one final comment I want to make here.
There's one final comment I want to make here.
Posted Jul 29, 2009 22:10 UTC (Wed) by Baylink (guest, #755)In reply to: There's one final comment I want to make here. by mjg59
Parent article: OSCON keynote: Standing out in the crowd
The percentage of problem perception is clearly gender skewed, markedly.
So that casts into some question the justification, as I see it, for the "disproportionately" in
> The undertext is "some male FOSS developers are assholes, and this creates a community that is disproportionately hostile to potential female contributors".
Some contributors to *all* projects are assholes; I'm male and middle aged (shudder), and I've given up on projects because a major developer was a massive jerk, in environments where there were no females in sight.
So while fixing that problem will probably lift all boats, *that* issue has nothing to do with sexism. My assertion, though, is that many people involevd in this issue are *conflating* developer assholiness with developer sexism, and trying to use the former as evidence of the latter.
Socially, there's evidence that women and men interact differently, and while I think this issue points directly to that, I don't think that's "men behaving badly", I just think it's "men behaving like men".
I'm not here to be an apologist for the death threat or vagina slide crowd; there are *certainly* sexist assholes in (and probably running) FOSS projects. But not all assholes are sexists. And yes, it might turn out to be the case, even if only historically, that a given project is going to have to decide explicitly "we want to be female-friendly", and go out of their way to do it.
And that may, in the final evaluation, impact on how that project does things, and how much it gets done. Could go one way, could go the other. Anyone who makes the blanket assertion that *merely* because that decision is taken and enforced, everything will be mercy and goodness and sweetness and light *for the project* is blowing blue smoke out their ass.
It'll probably be better for *female developers who want to work on that project*, but that is a separately measured quantity.
