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A lot of offensive or marginalising incidents in geek communities are, supposedly, intended as Humor. These jokes, aimed at a presumed-male audience, exclude women even when they do not explicitly insult them. Women who complain about such jokes are usually accused of not having a sense of humor, of being prudes, or making too big a number of a mere joke. "Guy jokes": the joke relies upon the audi
"Just because you sound polite, doesn't mean your words aren't hurtful. Just because you sound acerbic, doesn't mean your words aren't kind." -- Comrade Squinky "If you tread on someone's toes, and they tell you to get off, then get off their toes. Don't tell them to 'ask nicely'." -- Geeksophical A tone argument is an argument used in discussions, sometimes by concern trolls and sometimes as a de
On June 18 2015, a self-identified OpalRB core contributor made transphobic comments on Twitter. In response, Coraline Ada Ehmke opened issue 941 calling for removal of the core contributor from the project, while enquiring about the project maintainers' stance on the issue and its possible effect on future contributors. The response from other project maintainers was decidedly negative and includ
This is a list of well-known incidents of sexism, harassment, or other occurrences relevant to the discussion of women and feminism in geek communities. For a chronological list, see Timeline of incidents.
This is a timeline of sexist incidents in geek communities including: Technology industry Free and open source software Gaming Comic Book Fandom Science Fiction Fandom Universities ... and more See Timeline of geek feminism for the development of geek feminism itself. (Mary Gardiner explains the reason for this list in Why we document, originally on the Geek Feminism blog.) 1963[] The Great Breen
Introduction[] This is an example anti-harassment policy suitable for most open source, computing, or technology-related conferences. It may be adopted unchanged or tweaked to suit your conference.Why have an official anti-harassment policy for your conference? First, it is necessary (unfortunately). Harassment at conferences is incredibly common - for example, see this timeline of sexist incident
The CouchDB talk was a talk given at the Golden Gate Ruby Conference in April 2009 by Matt Aimonetti. It featured innuendo about porn and soft porn pictures, an example of a sexualized environment and just one in an ongoing list of Sexualized presentations. One slide of the talk featured (CW: sexually explicit image) this image of the buttocks of a woman wearing only a thong. Documentation[] Aimon
Welcome to the Geek Feminism Wiki A resource for and about women in geek communities. 1,207 articles since May 2008 The Geek Feminism Wiki is in archival mode. New accounts are restricted from editing due to vandalism, and we do not have the volunteer labor available to whitelist new accounts and monitor activity. The content of the wiki (most of which was written between 2009 and 2012) likely ref
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