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FeministPointOfView
AGeek FeministRetrospective
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Contentnotes
This presentation deals with sexism and issues surrounding it
It contains links to accounts of abuse, violence, etc.
I have provided content notes/trigger warnings inline for these
Pages on the GF wiki and blog also include trigger warnings inline
You are welcome to leave this talk at any time with no judgement
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Whatis Geek Feminism?
Wiki(2008)
http://geekfeminism.wikia.com
Blog (2009)
http://geekfeminism.org
Backchannels
Mailing lists, IRC, etc.
Structure(lackof)
No formal organisational body
No manifesto or statement of values
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Myrole
I started the blog and wiki
I was an admin for a few years
I stepped down from adminship in 2012
Now I'm a participant (albeit an opinionated one)
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The Geek Feministcommunity
"men, women, trans and genderqueer people, married people, single people,
polyamorous people, monogamous people, parents, childless people, people of
colour, mixed race people, immigrants, people of a variety of religions or no
religion, people with disabilities, heterosexual, bisexual, gay and lesbian
people, asexual people, people with > 20 years experience in technical fields,
members of the "digital generation", students, academics, unemployed people,
people who wear suits every day for work, professionally published writers,
artists and crafters, community managers, open source developers, people
who work with proprietary/non-open source software, gamers (online and
off), science fiction fans, anime and manga fans, vegetarians and vegans,
femmes, butches, androgynous people, people who have worked as sex
activists and educators, people who produce erotica/porn, people with PhDs,
people with no degree, introverts, extroverts, people on the autism spectrum
and off it, people with other mental health diagnoses..."
— Source
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RTFM cards by Brianna Laugher. Photo: CC-BY-SA.
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Origins: an urge todocument
I was involved in open source, LinuxChix etc
I wanted to research women in open source, tech, etc
Also, issues and problems we faced
I had trouble expressing myself -- lack of vocabulary
No prior education in feminism, gender studies, etc
Idea:start awiki!
Write things down as I learned them
Handy reference for people and projects I learned about
Note-taking for my own self-education in feminism
Potentially, an RTFM resource
geekfeminism.wikia.com
I chose Wikia for ease of admin
They handle spam/vandalism
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The Wiki today
Scope
Examine geekdom from a feminist point of view
Introduce geek women to feminist concepts in their own language
Improve the visibility of women in geekdom and orgs that support them
Provide evidence for sexism in geekdom
Explore oppressions that intersect with gender in geek culture
Content
High level concepts: intersectionality, privilege, allies
Women in geekdom: individuals, organizations
Timeline of Incidents, Timeline of Geek Feminism
Common issues: impostor syndrome, splaining, tokenism
Silencing tactics
Shared resources, eg. anti-harassment, therapist guide, feminist reviews
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FeministPointofView
(or at least a feminist point of view)
This is not Wikipedia
We are not neutral
We do not have to present opposing views
We do not require citations; lived experience is valued
Not everyonegets it
We have to constantly assert this
We ban egregiously and persistently anti-feminist editors
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Whywe document
People often criticise us for documenting problems, saying we're harming the
community.
We consider it a core part of what we do.
"Had you asked me in 2003 for troublesome incidents in Free
Software -- are we doing anything wrong, or is this a problem we've
inherited from other people who did things wrong, or is this just a
thing about women, that they don't like to be too nerdy in their spare
time? -- I don't know that I would have been able to give you
examples of anyone doing anything much wrong. A few unfortunate
comments about cooking and babies at LUGs, perhaps."
Mary Gardiner, Why we document, 2009
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Retroactive meta-documentation
We've been better at documenting what others do than what we do
We usually start doing things in an ad hoc fashion
Documentation of what we do comes later
For example
Wiki Editorial guidelines date from late 2013!
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2009: Geek Feminism blog
Standing Out intheCrowd
July at OSCON: my keynote about women in open source
Result: hundreds of blog comments, anxiety, dread
Wanted: safer space, shared responsibility, and support
Theblog is launched
About half a dozen people I knew
Mary, Val, Liz, Sumana, Yatima, Maco, Tempest, Lesley
(I can't quite remember! We don't have it documented.)
Influences: Hoyden About Town, Shakesville, Finally, a Feminism 101 Blog
A quick start: up and running in a few days
Comments policy based on Hoyden About Town (Mary and Skud)
Blog contributor guidelines (Google doc, also Mary and Skud)
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The problem: scaling feministactivism
Too much 101 and repetition
Abuse and harassment
Burnout (short and long term)
What wewanted
A forum where this was on topic
A curated audience, already feminist identified
Faster ramp-up for new activists
Focusing on multiplier-effect projects
Sharing the load to minimise burnout
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GF blog, the earlydays
2009:"awatershedyear"
Content note: These links lead to accounts of harassment, may include
sexual content, etc.
CouchDB "program like a porn star" talk
RMS "emacs virgins"
Mark Shuttleworth "girls don't understand computers"
(Trigger warning: violence and threats against women) MikeeUSA
Weweremaking it upas wewent along
Less developed feminist sensibilities
We wasted more time on non-allies
We used more humour, trolling, etc
We're now more careful (and/or professional)
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Racefail
First half 2009
Sprawling discussion about race and racism in science fiction publishing
and fandom
"Sides" seemed somewhat generational
older generation: single-author blogs, real names, etc
younger generation: livejournal, pseudonyms, etc
O HAI RACEFAILZ: Notes on reading an internet conflict
What welearnedfrom Racefail
Linkspam as a tactic
Vocabulary:
Derailing and silencing tactics
Parallels and similarities
between anti-oppression movements
between geek communities
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Whatwe didn'tlearn
Racial diversity is something we're still not great at
Almost all of us are white
Bloggers: 20% people of color by headcount, fewer by number of posts
Linkspam and Wednesday Geek Woman regularly include people of color,
but still a minority
Other intersections
We have several queer, trans, and genderqueer/gender non-conforming
contributors/participants
but would like more trans women's voices in our public spaces
We are mostly from developed, English-speaking countries
We have disabled contributors and work on accessibility, but could do
better
We have few direct contributions by younger and older women
We claim interest in all geekdoms, but tend to cluster around coding and
SFF
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Our culture starts tosettle
(As usual, this was all retroactively documented years later.)
What makes GeekFeminism different?
We dropped the F-bomb
Pan-geekdom, not particular to one field
Invite-only spaces / checks for shared values
(But not women-only)
Systems approach: kyriarchy, intersectionality, patterns of abuse...
Evidence-based feminism: documentation, statistics, data viz
Womenas aminorityingeekdom
Very different from mainstream feminism
Minority issues: invisibility, xkcd 385, increasing numbers
More likely to challenge gender norms
We have/lack different privileges
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2011onward: spawning newinitiatives
Visualisation: Geek Feminism Family Tree
Source on github
Notabledescendents
Anti-harassment policies
The Ada Initiative
Feminist hackerspaces (Seattle Attic, Flux, Double Union, etc)
Meanwhile,elsewhere...
Proliferation of geeky, feminist-flavoured media
Uptick in feminist content in mainstream media
Uptick of geek coverage in feminist media (eg. Jezebel)
Dev bootcamps and coding schools, many aimed at women
Kickstarter and other crowdfunding platforms enabling feminist projects
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2011-2012: Harassmentincidents
Harassment withinour community
A GF contributor was harassing people at events and online
We had no process to deal with this
The GF AHP was mostly for conferences, not dispersed online groups
Bonus complication: this person had admin rights
Result: asked to leave community and hand over admin rights
Harassment from outside
Harassment incident at a conference (which had no AHP)
Harasser used GF terms / cited our wiki
Harasser was not known to us, but we were implicated
Characterised as "The Dark Side of Geek Feminism"
We really didn't know what to do about this, except to say "Don't."
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Geek Feminism neededaCoC/AHP
But it was difficult
Primarily online spaces
Dispersed communities, no fixed membership
Do we want to respond to harassment:
which occurs outside our spaces
by people not formally associated with us
Holding ourselves to a higher standard
Protecting against bad-faith reports
Creating aGFCoC
Began in 2012
Stalled several times
Annalee Flower Horne led the current CoC effort
Our Code of Conduct is live as of today (June 26th, 2014)
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2012-2013: the blog sloweddown
Blogging overall has slowed down
Shift to other social media (especially Twitter)
Other commitments: Ada Initiative, AHPs, other outreach programs
Burnout (2 years seems normal)
Technical difficulties combined with lack of tech availability
We considered whether the blog had run its course
Keeping it alive
Mary recruited a specialist linkspam team
The blog is shifting more toward aggregation
Our backchannels remained active
We kept supporting each other
Other active orgs kept momentum going
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2014: 6years withoutflaming drama
Challenges,but not schisms
Differences in approach
Availability, energy, and burnout
Blurred boundaries for people with multiple affiliations
Internal incidents of oppressive behaviour and language
Harassment incidents
Technical and administrative bottlenecks
Most dramacamefrom outside
Ongoing harassment and abuse (especially blog comments)
Vandalism and trolling (especially on the wiki)
People who disagreed with our approach (this is fine! but sometimes there
was drama)
Muckraking journalism
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Howwe keptittogether
Marshalling our energy
no 101/RTFM
strong moderation (including banning, locking pages)
3rd party hosting (wikia, wordpress.com)
Distribution of work/stress
supporting/reviewing each other's writing
sharing comment moderation
linkspammers
Best practices/etiquette: a superset
trigger warnings (from fandom)
linkspam etiquette (from fandom)
accessibility measures (from disability activism)
trans-inclusiveness
Boundary-setting (see next page)
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Boundaries, notmanifestoes
Our first boundary-setting: Comment policy
Wiki scope and behaviour: Editor guidelines
Blog content: Guest post policy, linkspam guidelines
As usual, many of these were retrospectively documented
Other ways wedefinewhat wedo
Existing content/canon
provides continuity and context
but it's jargon, which is hard for newcomers
can be a weight tying us to the past
Inclusion/invitation processes (mostly lightweight)
eg. 3 guest posts = invitation to be a regular blogger
DoubleUnionwroteour manifesto for us
See their Base Assumptions
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An anarchistcollective
Leigh Honeywell pointed this out to me the other day.
Whoa.
My impostor syndrome, let me show you it.
I thought this was just how we did things on the Internet.
Structure,or lackthereof
Unincorporated
No formal finances, low costs, informal hat-passing
No official leaders
admins in various roles
step up and do it / step down anytime
"servant leadership"
but: Tyranny of Structurelessness
Collaborative, consensus-driven, evolving processes/guidelines
... but they evolve slowly and are documented more slowly
e.g. embarrassingly slow to adopt a full CoC for all our spaces
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Lessons learned
Don't makeour mistakes
Don't wait so long to document processes
Make roles and responsibilities explicit
Assume that membership will change and people will leave
Share responsibility and keys to everything (no personal accounts)
Start with a full Code of Conduct and ways to enforce it
Make paths to inclusion/invitation clear to outsiders
Give credit for individual work
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Lessons learned
But you might want emulatethese...
Conserve your energy / prevent burnout
Work with people who share values, not attributes
Adopt best practices and etiquette from as many sources as possible
Build reusable toolkits and focus on those with the highest return
Take a systems approach, recognise patterns
Use backchannels for organisation and mutual support
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Where next?
Caveat: these are just ideas I've heard about, not formal plans
A more formal structure?
would allow us to accept donations
Labor issues, paying contributors
volunteer labor = people with time on their hands = privilege
maybe participate in OPW or similar programs
Keep working on intersectionality
explicitly inviting intersectional voices
paying contributors may help with this
Document what's worked for us (and hasn't)
Major wiki improvements, community building around the wiki
Build more toolkits/resources
Spawn more groups that use our ideas
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Howtogetinvolved
Wiki editing // Editor guidelines - no account required
Blog comments // Comment policy
Guest posts // Guest post policy
Send us links // Instructions in every linkspam post
GF Classifieds // Here's how; Latest classifieds post
Join #geekfeminism on irc.freenode.net (open channel)
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Credits
Geek Feminism bloggers, guest posters, and commenters
Linkspamming team, especially lead linkspammers (most choose to be
anonymous)
Wiki editors and admins, especially Tim Chevalier, Rick Scott, Sarah
Stierch, and Mary Gardiner
Policy and community management: Annalee Flower Horne, Mary
Gardiner, Valerie Aurora, Leigh Honeywell
Technical support by Tigtog, Liz Henry, Leigh Honeywell, Matt
Zimmerman, Mary Gardiner, and others
Hundreds of contributors and participants overall. Thank you!
More info//Contact
skud@infotrope.net // Twitter: @Skud
http://geekfeminism.org // Twitter: @geekfeminism
These slides will be posted on geekfeminism.org
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geekfeminism-history

  • 2. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 2/30 Contentnotes This presentation deals with sexism and issues surrounding it It contains links to accounts of abuse, violence, etc. I have provided content notes/trigger warnings inline for these Pages on the GF wiki and blog also include trigger warnings inline You are welcome to leave this talk at any time with no judgement 2 / 30
  • 3. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 3/30 Whatis Geek Feminism? Wiki(2008) http://geekfeminism.wikia.com Blog (2009) http://geekfeminism.org Backchannels Mailing lists, IRC, etc. Structure(lackof) No formal organisational body No manifesto or statement of values 3 / 30
  • 4. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 4/30 Myrole I started the blog and wiki I was an admin for a few years I stepped down from adminship in 2012 Now I'm a participant (albeit an opinionated one) 4 / 30
  • 5. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 5/30 The Geek Feministcommunity "men, women, trans and genderqueer people, married people, single people, polyamorous people, monogamous people, parents, childless people, people of colour, mixed race people, immigrants, people of a variety of religions or no religion, people with disabilities, heterosexual, bisexual, gay and lesbian people, asexual people, people with > 20 years experience in technical fields, members of the "digital generation", students, academics, unemployed people, people who wear suits every day for work, professionally published writers, artists and crafters, community managers, open source developers, people who work with proprietary/non-open source software, gamers (online and off), science fiction fans, anime and manga fans, vegetarians and vegans, femmes, butches, androgynous people, people who have worked as sex activists and educators, people who produce erotica/porn, people with PhDs, people with no degree, introverts, extroverts, people on the autism spectrum and off it, people with other mental health diagnoses..." — Source 5 / 30
  • 7. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 7/30 Origins: an urge todocument I was involved in open source, LinuxChix etc I wanted to research women in open source, tech, etc Also, issues and problems we faced I had trouble expressing myself -- lack of vocabulary No prior education in feminism, gender studies, etc Idea:start awiki! Write things down as I learned them Handy reference for people and projects I learned about Note-taking for my own self-education in feminism Potentially, an RTFM resource geekfeminism.wikia.com I chose Wikia for ease of admin They handle spam/vandalism 7 / 30
  • 8. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 8/30 The Wiki today Scope Examine geekdom from a feminist point of view Introduce geek women to feminist concepts in their own language Improve the visibility of women in geekdom and orgs that support them Provide evidence for sexism in geekdom Explore oppressions that intersect with gender in geek culture Content High level concepts: intersectionality, privilege, allies Women in geekdom: individuals, organizations Timeline of Incidents, Timeline of Geek Feminism Common issues: impostor syndrome, splaining, tokenism Silencing tactics Shared resources, eg. anti-harassment, therapist guide, feminist reviews 8 / 30
  • 9. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 9/30 FeministPointofView (or at least a feminist point of view) This is not Wikipedia We are not neutral We do not have to present opposing views We do not require citations; lived experience is valued Not everyonegets it We have to constantly assert this We ban egregiously and persistently anti-feminist editors 9 / 30
  • 10. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 10/30 Whywe document People often criticise us for documenting problems, saying we're harming the community. We consider it a core part of what we do. "Had you asked me in 2003 for troublesome incidents in Free Software -- are we doing anything wrong, or is this a problem we've inherited from other people who did things wrong, or is this just a thing about women, that they don't like to be too nerdy in their spare time? -- I don't know that I would have been able to give you examples of anyone doing anything much wrong. A few unfortunate comments about cooking and babies at LUGs, perhaps." Mary Gardiner, Why we document, 2009 10 / 30
  • 11. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 11/30 Retroactive meta-documentation We've been better at documenting what others do than what we do We usually start doing things in an ad hoc fashion Documentation of what we do comes later For example Wiki Editorial guidelines date from late 2013! 11 / 30
  • 12. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 12/30 2009: Geek Feminism blog Standing Out intheCrowd July at OSCON: my keynote about women in open source Result: hundreds of blog comments, anxiety, dread Wanted: safer space, shared responsibility, and support Theblog is launched About half a dozen people I knew Mary, Val, Liz, Sumana, Yatima, Maco, Tempest, Lesley (I can't quite remember! We don't have it documented.) Influences: Hoyden About Town, Shakesville, Finally, a Feminism 101 Blog A quick start: up and running in a few days Comments policy based on Hoyden About Town (Mary and Skud) Blog contributor guidelines (Google doc, also Mary and Skud) 12 / 30
  • 13. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 13/30 The problem: scaling feministactivism Too much 101 and repetition Abuse and harassment Burnout (short and long term) What wewanted A forum where this was on topic A curated audience, already feminist identified Faster ramp-up for new activists Focusing on multiplier-effect projects Sharing the load to minimise burnout 13 / 30
  • 14. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 14/30 GF blog, the earlydays 2009:"awatershedyear" Content note: These links lead to accounts of harassment, may include sexual content, etc. CouchDB "program like a porn star" talk RMS "emacs virgins" Mark Shuttleworth "girls don't understand computers" (Trigger warning: violence and threats against women) MikeeUSA Weweremaking it upas wewent along Less developed feminist sensibilities We wasted more time on non-allies We used more humour, trolling, etc We're now more careful (and/or professional) 14 / 30
  • 15. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 15/30 Racefail First half 2009 Sprawling discussion about race and racism in science fiction publishing and fandom "Sides" seemed somewhat generational older generation: single-author blogs, real names, etc younger generation: livejournal, pseudonyms, etc O HAI RACEFAILZ: Notes on reading an internet conflict What welearnedfrom Racefail Linkspam as a tactic Vocabulary: Derailing and silencing tactics Parallels and similarities between anti-oppression movements between geek communities 15 / 30
  • 16. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 16/30 Whatwe didn'tlearn Racial diversity is something we're still not great at Almost all of us are white Bloggers: 20% people of color by headcount, fewer by number of posts Linkspam and Wednesday Geek Woman regularly include people of color, but still a minority Other intersections We have several queer, trans, and genderqueer/gender non-conforming contributors/participants but would like more trans women's voices in our public spaces We are mostly from developed, English-speaking countries We have disabled contributors and work on accessibility, but could do better We have few direct contributions by younger and older women We claim interest in all geekdoms, but tend to cluster around coding and SFF 16 / 30
  • 17. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 17/30 Our culture starts tosettle (As usual, this was all retroactively documented years later.) What makes GeekFeminism different? We dropped the F-bomb Pan-geekdom, not particular to one field Invite-only spaces / checks for shared values (But not women-only) Systems approach: kyriarchy, intersectionality, patterns of abuse... Evidence-based feminism: documentation, statistics, data viz Womenas aminorityingeekdom Very different from mainstream feminism Minority issues: invisibility, xkcd 385, increasing numbers More likely to challenge gender norms We have/lack different privileges 17 / 30
  • 18. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 18/30 2011onward: spawning newinitiatives Visualisation: Geek Feminism Family Tree Source on github Notabledescendents Anti-harassment policies The Ada Initiative Feminist hackerspaces (Seattle Attic, Flux, Double Union, etc) Meanwhile,elsewhere... Proliferation of geeky, feminist-flavoured media Uptick in feminist content in mainstream media Uptick of geek coverage in feminist media (eg. Jezebel) Dev bootcamps and coding schools, many aimed at women Kickstarter and other crowdfunding platforms enabling feminist projects 18 / 30
  • 19. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 19/30 2011-2012: Harassmentincidents Harassment withinour community A GF contributor was harassing people at events and online We had no process to deal with this The GF AHP was mostly for conferences, not dispersed online groups Bonus complication: this person had admin rights Result: asked to leave community and hand over admin rights Harassment from outside Harassment incident at a conference (which had no AHP) Harasser used GF terms / cited our wiki Harasser was not known to us, but we were implicated Characterised as "The Dark Side of Geek Feminism" We really didn't know what to do about this, except to say "Don't." 19 / 30
  • 20. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 20/30 Geek Feminism neededaCoC/AHP But it was difficult Primarily online spaces Dispersed communities, no fixed membership Do we want to respond to harassment: which occurs outside our spaces by people not formally associated with us Holding ourselves to a higher standard Protecting against bad-faith reports Creating aGFCoC Began in 2012 Stalled several times Annalee Flower Horne led the current CoC effort Our Code of Conduct is live as of today (June 26th, 2014) 20 / 30
  • 21. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 21/30 2012-2013: the blog sloweddown Blogging overall has slowed down Shift to other social media (especially Twitter) Other commitments: Ada Initiative, AHPs, other outreach programs Burnout (2 years seems normal) Technical difficulties combined with lack of tech availability We considered whether the blog had run its course Keeping it alive Mary recruited a specialist linkspam team The blog is shifting more toward aggregation Our backchannels remained active We kept supporting each other Other active orgs kept momentum going 21 / 30
  • 22. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 22/30 2014: 6years withoutflaming drama Challenges,but not schisms Differences in approach Availability, energy, and burnout Blurred boundaries for people with multiple affiliations Internal incidents of oppressive behaviour and language Harassment incidents Technical and administrative bottlenecks Most dramacamefrom outside Ongoing harassment and abuse (especially blog comments) Vandalism and trolling (especially on the wiki) People who disagreed with our approach (this is fine! but sometimes there was drama) Muckraking journalism 22 / 30
  • 23. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 23/30 Howwe keptittogether Marshalling our energy no 101/RTFM strong moderation (including banning, locking pages) 3rd party hosting (wikia, wordpress.com) Distribution of work/stress supporting/reviewing each other's writing sharing comment moderation linkspammers Best practices/etiquette: a superset trigger warnings (from fandom) linkspam etiquette (from fandom) accessibility measures (from disability activism) trans-inclusiveness Boundary-setting (see next page) 23 / 30
  • 24. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 24/30 Boundaries, notmanifestoes Our first boundary-setting: Comment policy Wiki scope and behaviour: Editor guidelines Blog content: Guest post policy, linkspam guidelines As usual, many of these were retrospectively documented Other ways wedefinewhat wedo Existing content/canon provides continuity and context but it's jargon, which is hard for newcomers can be a weight tying us to the past Inclusion/invitation processes (mostly lightweight) eg. 3 guest posts = invitation to be a regular blogger DoubleUnionwroteour manifesto for us See their Base Assumptions 24 / 30
  • 25. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 25/30 An anarchistcollective Leigh Honeywell pointed this out to me the other day. Whoa. My impostor syndrome, let me show you it. I thought this was just how we did things on the Internet. Structure,or lackthereof Unincorporated No formal finances, low costs, informal hat-passing No official leaders admins in various roles step up and do it / step down anytime "servant leadership" but: Tyranny of Structurelessness Collaborative, consensus-driven, evolving processes/guidelines ... but they evolve slowly and are documented more slowly e.g. embarrassingly slow to adopt a full CoC for all our spaces 25 / 30
  • 26. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 26/30 Lessons learned Don't makeour mistakes Don't wait so long to document processes Make roles and responsibilities explicit Assume that membership will change and people will leave Share responsibility and keys to everything (no personal accounts) Start with a full Code of Conduct and ways to enforce it Make paths to inclusion/invitation clear to outsiders Give credit for individual work 26 / 30
  • 27. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 27/30 Lessons learned But you might want emulatethese... Conserve your energy / prevent burnout Work with people who share values, not attributes Adopt best practices and etiquette from as many sources as possible Build reusable toolkits and focus on those with the highest return Take a systems approach, recognise patterns Use backchannels for organisation and mutual support 27 / 30
  • 28. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 28/30 Where next? Caveat: these are just ideas I've heard about, not formal plans A more formal structure? would allow us to accept donations Labor issues, paying contributors volunteer labor = people with time on their hands = privilege maybe participate in OPW or similar programs Keep working on intersectionality explicitly inviting intersectional voices paying contributors may help with this Document what's worked for us (and hasn't) Major wiki improvements, community building around the wiki Build more toolkits/resources Spawn more groups that use our ideas 28 / 30
  • 29. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 29/30 Howtogetinvolved Wiki editing // Editor guidelines - no account required Blog comments // Comment policy Guest posts // Guest post policy Send us links // Instructions in every linkspam post GF Classifieds // Here's how; Latest classifieds post Join #geekfeminism on irc.freenode.net (open channel) 29 / 30
  • 30. 6/28/2014 slides.html#1 file:///Users/skud/writing/presentations/geekfeminism-history/slides.html#1 30/30 Credits Geek Feminism bloggers, guest posters, and commenters Linkspamming team, especially lead linkspammers (most choose to be anonymous) Wiki editors and admins, especially Tim Chevalier, Rick Scott, Sarah Stierch, and Mary Gardiner Policy and community management: Annalee Flower Horne, Mary Gardiner, Valerie Aurora, Leigh Honeywell Technical support by Tigtog, Liz Henry, Leigh Honeywell, Matt Zimmerman, Mary Gardiner, and others Hundreds of contributors and participants overall. Thank you! More info//Contact skud@infotrope.net // Twitter: @Skud http://geekfeminism.org // Twitter: @geekfeminism These slides will be posted on geekfeminism.org 30 / 30