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Standing Out in the Crowd Kirrily Robert http://infotrope.net
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Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Dec 07, 2014

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Technology

Alex Bayley

Women are in a tiny minority in the open source software community. But in 2009, two projects have emerged that have a majority of women. Find out about these projects, and see what we can learn from them about increasing diversity in our community.
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Page 1: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Standing Out in the Crowd

Kirrily Robert http://infotrope.net

Page 2: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Linux Kernel Summit, 2008

Page 3: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Open source developers: 1.5%

Page 4: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Perl users: 5%

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Drupal: 10%

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Tech industry: 20%

Page 7: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

Open source developers: 1.5%

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xkcd.com

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0

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Yes No

Have you noticed sexismin the open source community?

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An ArchiveOf Our Own

http://archiveofourown.org/

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OTW is committed to protecting and defending fanworks from commercial

exploitation and legal challenge.

Page 12: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

OTW is committed to protecting and defending fanworks from commercial

exploitation and legal challenge.

Page 13: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

... a noncommercial and nonprofit central hosting place for fanfiction

and other transformative fanworks ...

Page 14: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

THE THRILLING TALE

Python and Ruby meet in a dark

alleyway. What happens?

1) They fight!

2) They kiss!

Your choice:Ruby is victorious! Python weeps

bitter tears and plots revenge.

THE END

1

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60,000 lines of Ruby etc.

20+ coders

100% female

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http://dreamwidth.org/

Dreamwidth

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210,000 lines of Perl etc.

40+ coders

75% female

Page 18: Standing Out in the Crowd: Women in Open Source

“We welcome people of any gender identity or expression, race, ethnicity, size, nationality, sexual orientation,

ability level, religion, culture, subculture, and political opinion.”

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“We think accessibility for people with disabilities

is a priority, not an afterthought. We think neurodiversity is a feature, not a bug.”

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Dreamwidth: 75%

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I’d never contributed to an open source project before,

or even considered that I could.

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I didn’t feel like I was wanted.

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I never got the impression that outsiders were welcome.

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I considered getting involved in Debian, but the barriers to entry

seemed high.

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It’s kind of like being handed a box full of random bicycle parts: it doesn’t help when you don’t know

how they go together and just want to learn how to ride a bike.

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People without a ton of experience get shunted off to side areas like docs and support, and those areas end up as the ladies’ auxiliary.

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What I like most is that there isn’t any attitude of ‘stand aside and leave the code to the grown-ups’.

If there’s something that I’m able to contribute, however small, then

the contribution is welcome.

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Deep down, I had always assumed coding required this kind of special aptitude, something that I just didn’t

have and never would...

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... It lost its forbidding mystique when I learned that people I had

assumed to be super-coders (surely born with keyboard attached!) had only started

training a year ago. ...

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People without any prior experience!

Women! Like me! Jesus! It’s like a barrier

broke down in my mind.

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Recruit diversity.

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Say it.Mean it.

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Tools.(tools are easy)

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Transparency.

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Don’t stare.

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Value all contributions.

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Call peopleon their crap.

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Pay attention.

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Image creditsLinux Kernel SummitJonathan Corbet, lwn.net

How it works Randall Munroe, xkcd.com

Kirk/Spockdreamlittleyo on LiveJournal

Further readinggeekfeminism.wikia.com