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- Computer underground Digest Wed Apr 28 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 31
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Cyop Editor: Etaoin Shrdlu, Senior
-
- CONTENTS, #5.31 (Apr 28 1993)
- File 1--Response to 'Gender on the Nets' (Re CuD #5.29)
- File 2--Re: Gender on the Nets (Re CuD 5.29)
- File 3--Re: Sexual Bias on the Net (Re Cud 5.29)
- File 4--A Female Response to the Gender Question in Cyberspace
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost electronically from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The
- editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302)
- or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
- 60115.
-
- Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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- LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
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- the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
- On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
- on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and on: Rune Stone BBS (IIRG
- WHQ) 203-832-8441 NUP:Conspiracy
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-
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- ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud (United Kingdom)
-
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-
- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
- diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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- specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
- relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
- preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
- unless absolutely necessary.
-
- DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
- the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
- responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
- violate copyright protections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 22 Apr 93 10:02:35 CDT
- From: rio!canary!chris@UUNET.UU.NET(Chris Johnson)
- Subject: File 1--Response to 'Gender on the Nets' (Re CuD #5.29)
-
- In response to Mike Holderness's post in CuD 5.29:
-
- > I am told that there were a large number of responses to my
- > piece, and that many took exception to my humorous quotation of
- > the lite Xmas _Economist_ piece, which described the Internet as
- > a "conspiracy" alongside the Masons, Opus Dei and such. The only
- > responses which I have actually seen were those from Larry
- > Landwehr and the response to this from Jim Thomas, who invited me
- > to respond.
- >
- > I began drafting a net-style response to Larry, with quotes:
- > > ... just like in a conversation with a religious zealot, the
- > > feminist dogma just had to surface ...
- >
- > -Oh dear, I thought, reading this. The "men-are-persecuted-
- > by-feminists" dogma, so tediously common on the Net, just had to
- > surface.
- >
- > This exercise in turn became tedious.
-
- Oh, woe is you, Mike -- forced to make a tedious response to a well
- thought out criticism by Larry Landwehr.
-
- Frankly, I don't think Mr. "M. Holderness" deserves to earn another
- farthing (pound, dollar, whatever) for writing _if_ his response to
- criticism is to respond by using the technique of labeling his
- opponent as yet another example of something "so tediously common on
- the Net". Just because Larry is male, and just because his response
- was on the Net to Mike's article on the Net, Larry's opinion is
- nothing but tedious dogma? Then I'd have to say your writing is only
- so much whining, Mr. Holderness. And get a life. Obviously, neither
- should be true.
-
- I thought the LTES article was interesting and thought provoking, and
- I also thought it was seriously flawed by feminist dogma. Actually, I
- thought a different phrase than 'dogma', but that will suffice for
- here.
-
- So most of the users of the Net are male. Is it any surprise? Most
- of the computer literate of the world are male, most of the technical
- people of the world are male, most of the scientists are male,
- presumably the higher average incomes are those earned by males, most
- of the sciences, maths and engineering university students are male.
-
- Where do you suppose most people get their access to the Net? What
- background gives people the most ability to use the Net? Do you
- suppose there are more computers in the Fine Arts colleges around the
- world or in the engineering and engineering schools?
-
- I'm sorry, but blaming the Net for the social and cultural mores and
- conventions of countries around the world, in any fashion or amount,
- just doesn't make sense. Yes, perhaps the Net can lead or enable a
- different set of conventions and standards. But it will be a
- difficult and uphill battle. Looking for conspiracies when something
- is merely reflecting the culture that spawned it seems fruitless.
-
- Why aren't there more women in the sciences and engineering programs
- at universities? It was extremely lopsided when I was student
- --perhaps 95% male. It made me feel pretty strange. I always wanted
- to see more women involved. That's only one, although large, facet of
- the problem of male domination of the Net.
-
- There could be some obscure psychological reasons for it -- maybe
- women being used to communicating on a more personal and emotional
- basis prefer voice and in-person contact, whereas men used to hiding
- their emotions and detaching themselves personally from conversations
- find electronic communication to be welcome relief from having to put
- on a face all the time. And the whys and wherefores of those
- behaviors are hotly debated in many circles today, right down to
- nature versus nurture, so I'd prefer to avoid even getting into it
- here.
-
- In summary, I valued the LTES article for being thought provoking but
- eventually ignored much of its reasoning as being feminist axe
- grinding. I valued Larry's criticism for bringing to light the
- insulting messages sent to males and for warning of how continued
- support of this vein of reasoning could well lead to the end of the
- anarchic free nature of the Net, but I also suspect his reaction was a
- bit paranoiac (at least I sure hope so!).
-
- Not copyright 1993 by: Chris (just guess my gender -- want to bet
- first?) Johnson Because it's worth the electrons it was written with,
- spread them where you will.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 22 Apr 93 09:44:58 EDT
- From: morgan@ENGR.UKY.EDU(Wes Morgan)
- Subject: File 2--Re: Gender on the Nets (Re CuD 5.29)
-
- This LTES article was rather interesting. My apologies for the
- untimely response; the birth of my daughter interrupted my normal
- email/news reading for about 2 weeks. 8)
-
- Let's get down to brass tacks, shall we?
-
- >>For these assumptions to be true, you're quite likely either to be a
- >>member of an academic institution in a Western industrialized country,
- >>or very well-to-do in world terms. You're also likely to be male. And
- >>the public area of the news system bears this out. An high proportion
- >>of messages -- over 90% in an unrepresentative sample of discussions
- >>of physics -- comes from the USA. An even higher proportion (of those
- >>with identifiable senders) comes from men.
-
- Never make assumptions about the sender of a particular message. The
- Usenet old-timers among us will recall, perhaps painfully, the
- infamous Mark Ethan Smith; she created quite a stir in some of the
- social newsgroups. With the widespread use of pseudonyms and
- nicknames, I'd like to know just how many messages in their study had
- truly "identifiable" senders. With the advent of anonymous servers,
- it's becoming even more gender-neutral.........
-
- Before we start aggravating our heartburn over these assertions, let's
- ask a rather simple question that, apparently, wasn't considered by
- the LTES author(s). Does the gender balance of the net reflect the
- gender balance of the corporate/educational structures behind it? If
- only XX% of Microsoft's net-enabled employees are women, it seems
- logical that roughly XX% of the Usenet postings from Microsoft will be
- from women. If only YY% of bigshot.com's technical staff is women,
- would we be surprised to find that YY% of bigshot.com's postings were
- authored by women?
-
- In and of itself, an authorship sample of Usenet articles means very
- little. If the gender profile of a site's postings corresponds to the
- gender profile of its employees, that would seem to be a Good Thing,
- since it indicates that the site is extending net privileges to
- everyone
- in a fair manner.
-
- >>"Women in science worry that these 'private' network exchanges of
- >>research results serve to reinforce the 'Old Boy Network' in
- >>scientific research circles, especially given the overwhelmingly male
- >>demographics of e-mail and news-group users," says Ruth Ginzberg,
- >>Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Wesleyan University in the US.
-
- "'private' network exchanges?" How did we move from the anyone-can-do-
- anything-they-darn-well-please anarchy of Usenet to 'private' network
- exchanges? I've *never* heard the word 'private' applied to Usenet; I
- suspect that Dr. Ginzberg has been either misinformed or misquoted.
-
- If we consider email, I wonder how statistics were gathered to support
- this assertion, since only the most unethical sysadmin would release
- such data to the outside world. I, for one, would *never* give away
- copies of *my* mailer logs.
-
- >>Why should there be this preponderance of men?
-
- Are we missing a more basic answer? If the percentage of net use by
- women corresponds to the percentage of women in technical fields, the
- problem does NOT lie within the net. I think someone's looking for
- controversy........
-
- >>Sarah Plumeridge is
- >>research assistant on a project to study women's use of computers at
- >>the University of East London. She comments that "A lot of research
- >>suggests that women prefer computing when it's for use, as a tool,
- >>when it's not taught as an abstract science." It's clear from the tone
- >>of messages in the public news-groups that the _boys_ see them as a
- >>playground.
-
- I wonder what selection of newsgroups was used as the rationale for this
- comment. I strongly urge Ms. Plumeridge to examine newsgroups such as
- comp.unix.admin, comp.sys.att, alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk, and comp.sys.hp;
- she won't find a 'playground' attitude there.
-
- I wonder if any of these people realize just how many newsgroups there
- are. The site on which I read Usenet carries, at last count, 1021 news-
- groups; they range from the sewers of alt.* to the carefully moderated
- groups like sci.military. I suspect that these researchers spent a lot
- of time in alt, rec, and soc; they seem to have ignored the sci.* and
- comp.* hierarchies.
-
- >>There are more serious issues too. Cheris Kramerae of the Department
- >>of Speech Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana is,
- >>working on the issue of sexual harassment on "the net". This happens
- >>in very specific ways - men sending abusive messages to women, often
- >>having obtained their electronic addresses from the electronic
- >>"personals column".
-
- I'm surprised that no one has mentioned the rather obvious point in
- the above paragraph. Notice that the "abusive messages" were received
- *after* the women posted to the "electronic 'personals column.'"
- Within Usenet, the 'personals column' is alt.personals, which is used
- almost exclusively as a dating/encounter service. Let's compare this
- with other, more traditional media. Do women who post personals in
- the newspaper receive a certain amount of harassing replies? Do women
- who write their number on the bathroom wall (I've known a few who did)
- really expect NOT to receive some harassing replies?
-
- Let's get real, Ms. Kramerae; *anyone*, male or female, who posts to
- Usenet (and especially to newsgroups like alt.personals) should be
- prepared to receive a certain number of 'nastygrams' in reply. Heck,
- I've received pornographic images, obscene letters, and the like, and
- I don't post to (or even READ) the sexual (or feminist) discussion
- groups. Now, if someone merely picked addresses out of other
- news-groups and started dropping harassing email in their mailboxes,
- *that* would be a valid concern; however, I only know of *two* such
- incidents in my 10+ years of participation in Usenet. If anyone has
- concrete examples of widespread behavior of this type, I'd like to see
- them.
-
- >>There is also the problem of socially retarded
- >>students abusing the system to distribute digitized pornographic
- >>images: the direct equivalent of the calendar on the workshop wall.
-
- I'm not defending the alt.binaries.pictures.* crowd (again, I don't
- even read those newsgroups), but there's one important difference.
- When an image comes across Usenet, it is NOT immediately viewable;
- the end user must manipulate the raw data before viewing is possible.
- If you are basing your complaint on the mere presence of the material,
- I would compare it to Playboy, Penthouse, Hustler, and other traditional
- media; are you as upset about the Playboy down at the convenience store
- as you seem to be about alt.binaries.pictures.*?
-
- >>Kramerae concludes, however, that "Obviously it is not the technology
- >>but the policies which are presenting particular problems for women."
-
- Uh huh.......and I suppose that the 'pornography' that happens to
- con-centrate on men is posted only by male homosexuals, right?
-
- When discussing policies, it's important to remember that the
- "Internet" encompasses the world. If you can create a policy that
- reconciles the cultures of nations like the USA, France, Kuwait,
- Japan, Israel, Ukraine and Saudi Arabia, I'd *love* to see it. If
- you can create a policy that respects the Western, Middle Eastern, and
- Oriental cultural perspectives about women, you're in the wrong
- business; you should be working for the UN. 8)
-
- >>Kahn's list is, then, exactly an invisible college. Given the vast
- >>space occupied by anti-feminist men in the open news-groups which are
- >>supposed to discuss feminism, it can only operate if it remains
- >>private and by invitation.
-
- Actually, soc.feminism (the premier newsgroup for discussion of
- feminism) is a *moderated* newsgroup. In fact, several people have
- recently argued that the moderators are biased against *men*. The
- "femail" mailing list is moderated; in addition, it *requires* that
- subscribers reveal their gender. (supposedly, this is for "records and
- statistics only") Membership in the "sappho" mailing list, a support
- group for gay and bisexual women, is restricted to women.
-
- The noise issue is basically irrelevant. Many, if not most,
- newsreaders support 'killfiles', which allow the user to drop articles
- with subjects or authors they don't like into the bit bucket. For
- instance, a simple "/morgan@engr.uky.edu/h:j", placed in a global
- killfile for the rn news-reader, would kill every article I post;
- you'd never have to see my postings again.
-
- Remember, the networked world is an anarchy. If you don't like a
- newsgroup, start your own! Every newsgroup in Usenet started with
- someone who said "I want this"; that person started a discussion,
- collected votes, and (if the vote was affirmative) saw the newsgroup
- created. (alt.* is an exception; any news admin or news-savvy user
- can create an alt.* newsgroup, but they usually suffer from low
- distribution as a result) Anyone can propose (and run a vote for) a
- new newsgroup; if you want to create a moderated newsgroup, go for it!
- Some newsgroups started as 'wide open', but later were voted into
- moderation; feel free to start a discussion to moderate your favorite
- group. If you want a private mailing list, start it up; that's what
- the femail and sappho moderators did. If you want an invitation-only
- mailing list, just set it up; I am a member of one such list. Of
- course, there are probably many such lists; by definition, we wouldn't
- know of their existence.
-
- Remember, too, that the "Internet" is not simply "professional people
- and students." The "Internet" encompasses everything from Cray
- supercomputers with fiber optic lines to PCs and PDP-11s in
- individual's homes with 1200 baud modems. Ambitious programs are
- placing K-12 students on the net in ever-growing numbers, and sites
- such as the Cleveland Free-Net are open to (literally) anyone who can
- reach them by telephone. If you assume that all net.users are
- physically/emotionally/intellectually mature, you are making a grave
- error that can (and, in my opinion, will) invalidate most of your
- findings.
-
- Without hard data and specific discussion of that data, this article
- seems to be little more than hyperbole.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 22 Apr 1993 23:13:23 -0600 (CDT)
- From: Louis Giliberto <magus@DRKTOWR.CHI.IL.US>
- Subject: File 3--Re: Sexual Bias on the Net (Re CuD 5.29)
-
- In CuD 5.29 the gender issues on the internet came up again, and some
- of the statements made truly amazed me. It seemed to me to be a case
- of not being able to see past one's nose. The "statistically skewed"
- data samples were not just skewed, they were intolerable for a lot
- of reasons. I'd like to point out some problems with the comments that
- imply or state gender bias on the net.
-
- In the first section the CuD editors bring up this point:
-
- >1. DOES THE NET POTENTIALLY CIRCUMVENT CONVENTIONAL PUBLISHING TO THE
- > DETRIMENT OF WOMEN?
-
- Part of the conclusion the editors reached was this:
-
- >There is abundant research
- >indicating that although women are under-represented in
- >academically-oriented journals, this under-representation appears to
- >be the result of factors in academia rather than the consequence of
- >significant gender bias in editorial gate-keeping procedures.
-
- In other words, the alleged under-representation of women in
- academically-oriented journals is a *symptom* of a problem with
- academia, and not a problem of gender bias in allowing access to
- publishing.
-
- Why does this same argument not apply to the "Net"? I believe it
- should. If it does, then obviously the author of the original article
- should not be scanning the sci.* categories for male/female names.
- Any person who can see knows that the majority of people involved in
- scientific interests are males. I submit the lack of female presence
- in the sci.* categories and any other categories the author claims are
- a *by-product* of gender distribution in careers and not any type of
- bias created by USENET, discussion/speaking/typing techniques, etc. I
- suggest the author do the same "statistical sample" on rec.crafts.misc
- and he will see the opposite bias: far more women posting than men.
-
- Again, I'm not stating that this gender distribution is fair or
- tolerable, or that it's unfair or intolerable, just that it is not
- coming from the "Net" itself. It is coming from society and appears
- on the Net. My point is to refute any type of claim that the Net
- imposes a gender bias.
-
- However, I might like to interject one sentence here on gender bias in
- general: isn't it just possible that women are more attracted to
- rec.crafts.misc than men? Isn't it just possible that men are more
- attracted to the science industries than women? On a recent GRE
- distribution, there were by a great majority more women taking the
- subject exam in psychology than men. Does this imply a gender-bias
- toward men in the field of psychology? By the arguments commonly
- used, it should. In most cases, any type of non-uniform distribution
- causes cries of sexual discrimination. Of course sexual
- discrimination exists, I'm sorry to say. However, a non-uniform
- distribution is not conclusive evidence of sexual discrimination,
- gender bias, or what have you. It is a symptom of it, but there are
- other factors to consider as well.
-
- I would also like to quote another portion of the editors' text which
- I strongly agree with:
-
- >The fact that we might answer the first two questions negatively does
- >not mean that male dominance does not exist on the Nets. Nor does the
- >absence of significant impact in some areas mean that there is no
- >significant impact in others that ultimately makes the Net less
- >hospitable for women than men.
-
- I could not have said it better myself. But I must contend with
- the editors' quote from the BAWIT paper:
-
- > The experiences of women online are both personal and
- > political. To a certain extent, their causes are rooted in
- > the physical world --economics and social conditioning
- > contribute to the limited numbers of women online.
-
- It couldn't perhaps have anything to do with the fact that the male
- and female psyche differ and that a sterile interface such as an ASCII
- terminal is more appealing to the male psyche while a face-to-face
- discussion might appeal more to the female psyche?
-
- Damn, I wish I could remember where I saw this study, but there was
- a study where all they did was ask people to sit down at a table. By
- an overwhelming percentage, women sat next to each other, while men
- sat across from each other. The conclusion of this study was that
- women prefer closer contact and tolerate a greater infringement of
- their "personal space" than males. Reasons? Some people might say
- "social conditioning", others might say it's a latent trait left over
- from humankind's nomadic periods where the women reared the children
- and were thus forced to tolerate a closeness while the men were
- hunting and fighting and were thus forced to be more protective of
- their personal space.
-
- I would say it's just how men and women are -- deal with it.
-
- As a corollary, the same study showed that when men and women were in
- the room together and asked to sit, they grouped together in gender
- clumps. I.e., the men tended to sit with men, and the women tended to
- sit with women. That may further explain the clumping that I described
- earlier when I suggested he try rec.crafts.misc, and why women are
- predominant in psychology: people like to be around things they can
- relate to, and often the easiest thing to relate to is that which is
- most like yourself.
-
- Either way, the conclusions of this study, if it's still out there
- somewhere, would explain why males are more predominate on the Net than
- females. A non-contact form of expression seems to appeal more to males
- than females.
-
- > Additionally, online environments are largely determined by
- > the viewpoints of their users and programmers, still
- > predominately white men (p. 1).
-
- This statement is most inflammatory. It is segregating thought on the
- basis of sex and race. The environment is determined by the viewpoints
- of their users and programmers. True. I agree without a doubt.
- However, isn't it sexist, racist, and prejudiced to say that white men
- think a certain way? I don't think so since that would easily explain
- why there is a predominance of males in engineering and a predominance
- of females in nursing, but the "politically correct" opinion would
- be that you cannot say that one person thinks a certain way because
- of his race, sex, etc. The logic here is unbelievably absent. The statement
- is contradictory and hypocritical.
-
- >None of this would necessarily prevent women's access to on-line
- >communication, nor is anybody (to my knowledge) claiming it does. The
- >value of the BAWIT paper is that it reminds us that access cannot be
- >automatically assumed to be equal for everybody, and that the barriers
- >to access may be subtle and complex.
-
- So, assuming this is true, what's your point still? I thought the
- topic was gender bias on the net with the net as the cause. I.e.,
- some type of filtration (either consciously or unconsciously) that
- was inherent in the net. As I stated, there is no problem with the net.
- If there is a problem, it is with society.
-
- >Illinois/Urbana-Champaign) conducted a small study on African-American
- >educators for use in training adults to communicate over networks.
- >Contrary to her initial expectations, she found that women may feel
- >more "equal" in communicating electronically. She concluded:
- >
- > .....Clearly, for many women, face-to-face communication
- > could find them at a disadvantage, if they feel less
- > powerful or verbally skilled or even feel physically weaker
- > and smaller. In fact, they may embrace e-mail even more
- > enthusiastically than the men, because it is such an
- > "equalizer."
-
- Clearly, I have to throw this away completely. The net for the most
- part is not used for professional communications. The net is used
- for personal communications of a recreational/hobbyist form. There
- are no professional papers published in sci.*. There is informal
- discussion, and the other study I mentioned showed that in *informal*
- situations women prefer closer contact with those they are speaking
- to than men. This study was done on using a network in a completely
- different environment. Further, e-mail is addressed to one person
- while a USENET post is addressed to many. The bias may be due to the
- fact that men embrace greater exposure more than women. Women may
- prefer a one-on-one communication rather than blabbing to the world
- like men seem to do (proof that women are smarter than men in many
- ways).
-
- It would be interesting to do a study where all posts are tallied,
- and see what percentage of posting is e-mail and what is public on
- a per-gender basis. If females send e-mail most of the time, and
- males publicly post most of the time, the reason may not be that
- it is an "equalizer", but that females prefer intimate conversation
- while males prefer to address a group. Other mediums such as IRC
- should not be ignored, but tallied separate since it is not equivalent
- to e-mail or USENET; it would rather show the initiative on a per-gender
- basis to participate in live conversation on an electronic medium.
-
- Now, for harassment, I don't even want to touch the issue since it's
- such a ticking bomb, but I would like to make one point:
-
- >When I first began using an electronic network about 1981, I had a
- >gender-neutral logon ID. Before I learned how to set "no-break," I was
- >habitually plagued late at night by young testosterone-laden males who
- >broke in wanting to know if I were an "M or F?" When I flashed "M,"
- >the sender departed, only to be replaced by another flasher with the
- >same question. Only once was the sender a female, as she later
- >revealed in person. On those occasions when I was feeling malicious,
- >I would send back an "F." I was amazed at the simplicity and
- >coarseness of the pickup lines. In discussing this with female
-
- Is a pickup line harassment? If you offer to buy someone a drink,
- they say no, and you walk away, is that harassment? If a flasher
- flashes you on the train platform, is that harassment or lewd
- behavior? To me, harassment is a *continual* approaching of someone
- that does not wish to be approached (in a sexual manner or otherwise).
- The editors do not mention if they really were harassed or approached
- with graphic statements. There is a big difference. I can offend
- someone by saying "I want to live in your trousers" (Courtesy of Prince
- Charles), but I can just as easily offend someone by saying "I hope
- you hit a gas truck and taste your own blood" (Courtesy of Sam Kinison).
- If I repeatedly make *either* comment that is harassment, using it
- once would just show ignorance.
-
- And some people like that type of sexual attention. I don't mean
- harassment, I mean being continually approached by the opposite (or same)
- sex for dating, romance, a roll in the hay, whatever. Too many young
- women are anorexic and bulemic. Why? To improve their outward appearance
- to attract men (or women, whichever they prefer). They *want* attention
- from men. Same goes for men. They spend a lot of money on health clubs
- too, and some take steroids to improve their bulk in order to "impress"
- women with their bodies. Granted, this is sick and wrong, but it just proves
- that what some people are offended by (constantly being hit on) and view as
- harassment, some people are willing to risk their lives and health for.
- Hopefully most people are in between and 1) aren't stupid enough to want
- someone who would only be attracted to them for their looks, and 2) can
- understand that being hit on 500 times by 500 different people isn't the
- same as being harassed -- harassment is being continually pestered by
- the same person.
-
- >The gender games and fears of harassment seem of sufficient concern
- >that some universities cover it in their computer and other policies
-
- To me this says that it generates sufficient concern to the universities'
- lawyers that the school may be named in a sexual harassment suit so
- to play it safe they have to make it clear they won't be a party to
- or protect such actions. It does not show me by itself that a problem
- exists.
-
- >If there are in fact gender barriers that work to the detriment of
- >women, the first step is to recognize that they exist and then to
- >identify the ways in which they operate. This is nothing that should
- >threaten males. Hard evidence one way or the other would define the
- >nature and extent of the problem. If, as many of us believe, there is
- >a problem, what then should we do? The next step is simply recognizing
-
- I agree completely, however, the problem, if existent, hasn't been
- defined yet. Again, I claim there is nothing wrong with the net or
- how it operates. If there is a problem, it is a problem with the
- "real world", and as the real world changes, so will the net.
-
- The net is merely a microcosm of the macrocosmic universe. "As above,
- so below. As below, so above." Fix the above world, and the "Computer
- Underground" will follow. Breed wisdom and tolerance on the net,
- and it will carry over to the workplace. But whatever you do, do not
- blame the net. The net is an interactive medium, not a gender biased
- institution.
-
- >are gender-shaped, then communication problems can occur. As often as
- >not, the dominant style "wins" and the subordinate style loses--not on
- >the bases of content of ideas, but by the overpowering style of one
- >way of talking that silences the other.
-
- Hmm. I have a hard time accepting that. Look at the following names
- and see who "won" (or is winning) and who "lost" (or is losing) and
- see if you can still tell me that the dominant style wins: Jesus Christ,
- Adolf Hitler, Ghandi, Josef Stalin, Buddah, Aleister Crowley, Joe McCarthy,
- Martin Luther King, etc. Most of the ideas differ greatly, but the most
- common thread upon who "won" and who "lost" in the end was who used a dominant
- style (of speech and action) and who used a (I disagree with the word
- subordinate since I think the real point is active vs. passive, and
- passive by no means subordinate) passive approach.
-
- Jesus Christ, Ghandi, Buddah, Aleister Crowley, and Martin Luther King
- all used a passive approach and their ideals are more prevelantly accepted
- in society of today than Stalin, Hitler, and McCarthy (which are all about
- as far as you can get from each other on a political scale) who used
- a dominant - oppressive even - approach.
-
- Those with a good idea don't have to yell, if it's that good, they'll be
- heard anyhow. If it's a crappy idea, even if it is accepted for a while
- due to the sheer racket they make, it will lose in the end after people
- think about it for a while. Hopefully the whole "politically correct"
- attitude will die out this way.
-
- >So, to Larry I would say: I accept your fears, but I'm not convinced
- >that denying the problem is the best solution. Let's take a step back
- >and ask women how *they* feel in engaging in online interaction.
-
- To the editors I would say: I'm not convinced there is a problem...at
- least with the net. Why not also ask men how they feel in engaging
- in online interaction? Did you ever stop to think that maybe the
- predominantly male net society doesn't realize there is a lack of
- female involvement because they are not paying attention to the gender
- of the author, but what the author is saying? Maybe some of the
- people crying "net gender bias" should stop counting male and female
- and pay attention to what is being said instead. It seems to me
- that the people complaining the most are also the ones who complain
- that people should judge people for what's inside, not their sex. For
- once it seems to be happening, so now why are they suddenly paying
- attention to the sex of the poster rather than what is being posted?
-
- As for Mr. Holderness, I will keep my comments brief since much of
- what he said I addressed above.
-
- >_If_ the net is an invisible college, who may it exclude? Last
- >year, for a quite different article in _New Scientist_, I counted
- >the apparent geographical location and apparent gender of some
- >300 news-group articles (most in sci.*). Some 97% had US
- >addresses and over 90% of those with identifiable given-names
- >were male. Many fewer than 97% of all scientists work in the US
- >and fewer than 90% are male; empirically, there's an issue to
- >investigate here.
-
- Let me explain it so that even he can understand it.
-
- 1) If you know there are predominantly males in scientific fields,
- stop biasing your results by sampling sci.*. Either sample
- from 1/2 male dominant fields and 1/2 female dominant fields,
- or sample all the fields. I can go to England and knowing that
- mostly white people live there be conveniently surprised that
- non-whites are in a minority - a parallel to the conclusion you
- reached. It's called "stacking the deck in your favor". While
- your reasearch may apply to the concerns of_New Scientist_, it does
- not apply to the concerns of net users or prospective net users in general.
-
- 2) As for most coming from the U.S.
- a) The Internet is a U.S. creation, springing from DARPA Internet,
- (Defense dept. Advanced Research Projects Agency). That is also
- why if you look at a network map from as little over a year ago,
- there were no I-net connections into Eastern-Bloc (i.e., USSR
- controlled) countries. The Pentagon is not in the habit of
- allowing foreign countries to plug into their computer networks.
- This is also why you see most posts coming from places that end
- in *.edu, *.com, *.gov, *.mil, etc. Originally, there was no
- public access. You had to be doing work for the defense dept.
- to obtain an internet connection, and even today it is difficult
- and costly to obtain an internet connection if you don't fall
- into one of those groups.
-
- The going rate for a non-U.S.-gov't-approved connection (like
- a connection to your house) is $1,000 per month for a 56K connection,
- and $2,000 per month for a T1 connection. That does not include
- leased line fees, just the IP connection. And that is for people
- in the U.S. where the *backbone* is. An overseas connection still
- must eventually route itself to the backbone, and that is even
- more costly.
-
- b) The U.S. has by far more computers around than most countries.
- In fact, in a recent issue of PC Magazine, there was a statistic
- given that more electrical power is used by U.S. computers
- in a year than is generated by all the power plants in Switzerland
- in a year.
-
- There is no empiric issue to investigate; there is no issue. The sample
- was poisoned, and he doesn't know the history of the Internet or how or
- why it is set up.
-
- >I made it clear that this was not a scientific survey. Last week,
- >before being asked for these comments, I was working up a
- >proposal for just such a survey: run the "From:" line of every
- >news-group posting for six months or a year past the ISO 3166
- >country codes and past _Naming Baby_, and see what falls out.
- >Would people on the net object to this? Please take it for
- >granted that I understand the statistical limits on
- >interpretation of the results. Please tell me if someone else is
- >already doing this.
-
- I would object on the basis I stated above: Females may be more apt
- to communicate in a one-on-one basis (i.e., e-mail) and males may
- be more apt to communicate in a public forum (i.e., USENET). The reason
- may not be gender bias, just the fact that males publicly post more
- often than females since females prefer one-on-one discussions. You cannot
- draw a pure conclusion from the survey. The survey will give you an
- accurate count (close, anyhow), but the results will not be able
- to be interpreted cleanly without a much deeper examination.
-
- >other researchers who will have time to comment. All those I came
- >across working on the issue were, for some reason, women. I
- >always welcome further contacts.
-
- Because the majority of the users, men, aren't counting posts
- made by men and women. They're reading the post, not the header.
-
- >My personal view is that "the calendar on the workshop wall" is a
- >form of harassment, the effect of which is to contribute to the
- >exclusion of women from mechanical engineering and so forth. I
-
- Yeah, those mechanical engineering firms just have tons of near-porn
- plastering their walls. It improves their image, don't you know?
- I'm sure a certain computer company in New York that developed the
- PC's most people use today have tons of "girlie pix" lining their
- walls. Get a clue. The majority of those types of pictures are
- prevalent in an environment where a tie is not required for work.
-
- >I appreciated Jim Thomas' thoughtful and tolerant reply to Larry.
- >Jim clearly has more patience than I can muster these days. I
- >regret that he and I have had to put effort into explaining that
- >it is appropriate for articles to appear on the net which are
- >critical of some features of its current, and I hope temporarily
- >aberrant, state. I find it deeply ironic that we have had to do
- >so in response to an article which so vehemently invokes the
- >First Amendment.
-
- Bah, humbug. "Aberrant state"? Excuse me, but Mr. Holderness is the one
- who is aberrant. I find it ironic that he questions the fact that
- most posts in sci.* are by men when the scientific field is male
- dominated, and I find it ironic that he wonders why most of the posts
- come from the U.S. when the Internet proper is a U.S. institution
- first and foremost, and has only recently expanded outside the
- 50 states.
-
- How can you criticize something and call it aberrant if you don't know
- why it exists, who it primarily exists for, and what it's function is?
- Granted, the shape of the Internet has changed much since its first
- inception, but he is asking a question similar to: "Why are most
- of McDonald's customers American?" or "Why are there more phones in the
- U.S. than in other countries?" Because it was developed first and
- foremost for American use, and it gradually expanded outward, and it
- costs more elsewhere at least at first.
-
- The lack of depth on Mr. Holderness' part to seek a basic explanation for
- certain "empirical facts" when those explanations are very clear
- and for the most part well-known makes me question his ability
- and integrity as a journalist. I could go into an American nursing
- school, see mostly women, and cry aloud: "Men are being discriminated
- against!" I could look at the railroad industry and seeing more
- supertrains in Europe, Japan, etc. cry aloud: "There's an empirical
- issue here! The U.S. has a lot of miles of railroad, and all of it
- is nowhere near the supertrain capabilities elsewhere!"
-
- But none of that would make sense, would it? Why cry wolf before
- looking even at the surface for a possible explanation? That is
- not responsible journalism; that is media hype.
-
- To answer his last topic, that of the defense of seemingly
- "stupid" free speech, or bothering to defend "puerile" topics:
-
- >It is issues such as this -- the suppression of political comment
- >-- which the drafters of the Amendment clearly had in mind and
- >which exercises people out here. Few here really bother about the
- >free expression aspect of the Mappelthorpe (sp?) exhibition in DC
- >or the current attempt to suppress "adult" (i.e. puerile) movies
- >beamed into the UK by satellite. To be honest, no-one's getting
- >very publicly worked up about the Prime Minister either.
-
- I suppose the American stance on Free Speech makes as much sense
- to an Englishman as does figurehead royalty to an American. Neither
- can see the purpose of the other's interest, but to each it means a lot.
-
- I have to disagree that the suppression of political comment is what
- the drafters had in mind. Even if it were, there are more types
- of political comment than the written and spoken word: flag burning,
- cartoons, art, and other forms of symbolic expression can make striking
- political comments (often more so than the mere word).
-
- Perhaps in the context of "I may not agree with what you say, but I
- will defend to the death your right to say it" (paraphrased), _Civil
- Disobedience_, and "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"
- underscore the intentions overall more so than a part of the whole:
- an individual may exist in a society and still be an individual; it
- is of many diverse individuals that a society is made. E pluribus unum.
- Those seem to be the intentions floating around at the time of the
- writing of that document.
-
- A more relevant and timely example of the importance of the extension
- of free speech is the United States Secret Service pounding on your
- door and confiscating your computer because on-line media isn't
- protected under the auspices of the "free press" premise that is used
- to protect paper copy. Ask Knight Lightning about that.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 08:56 CDT
- From: <BOEHLEFELD@WISCSSC.BITNET>
- Subject: File 4--A Female Response to the Gender Question in Cyberspace
-
- A friend of mine has a small sign on her door. It includes statistics
- about wage and salary differences between men and women. Then it says,
-
- "Yes, Virginia, there is a gender hegemony."
-
- Based on the data I've seen to date (scant, I'll admit), I suspect the
- comment could apply as easily to the nets as to earnings.
-
- Larry Landwehr's comments irked me. And, to Larry I would say, we can
- stand the heat; nevertheless, we'd like to get out of the kitchen. But
- I don't want to be flippant in this response because I think there's
- more at stake here than trading feeble witticisms.
-
- In his response to Landwehr, Mike Holderness mentions that he's a
- journalist and places much of his response into a journalistic
- context. I share that background, so it's one of several filters that
- should be fairly obvious in my response. Added to that, I am female,
- and I have been looking at gender issues on the nets (among other
- things) for the past few years.
-
- First, let me say that my journalism background may make my comments
- unrepresentative of all women. I've talked with feminist scholars in
- face-to-face arenas about First Amendment conflicts with feminist
- agendas (e.g., the elimination of pornography). I've told them that I
- value free speech and free press and am likely to continue to do so,
- lest John Peter Zenger's wife continued to publish a newspaper in vain
- while her husband sat in jail. On that level, I think Larry Landwehr
- (and anyone else) can say pretty much whatever he wants (they want)
- with my support of his (their) right to do so. But I say that while
- fully aware that some feminists would rather risk censorship than
- permit continued degradation of women in speech and the press.
-
- But, as Holderness properly notes, freedom of speech and the press is
- not a concept fully understood (or supported) in the rest of the
- world. And there is, indeed, obnoxious and offensive speech. Now,
- here's where I see the gender issues entering in.
-
- Landwehr is simply wrong to suggest that it's inappropriate to apply
- feminist theory to the nets. Women are part of the nets (even though
- their participation is apparently less than men's) and feminist
- theorists are among them. Why should they be prohibited from studying
- the interactions there from some feminist perspective? I can think of
- no good reason.
-
- Women I've talked to (f2f and via cmc) are sometimes intimidated by
- some males' exercise of their right to free speech. The problem
- becomes one of a "chilling effect," in which speech is inhibited
- because some speakers are afraid to voice their ideas and opinions.
- They are afraid of opening themselves up to harassment, or worse.
- Whether intentional or not comments like Landwehr's "feminist dogma"
- remarks can have that chilling effect. (Not only women are silenced,
- but also some men by such tactics.)
-
- Secondly, in Jim Thomas's response, he notes that he sees "no
- significant evidence" that the "old boys" network is being recreated
- in cyberspace. He notes, "The 'old boys' no longer control the
- terrain..." I'm sure he realizes that the "old boys" have *never*
- controlled the entire terrain, but the share allotted women has been,
- and continues to be, small. Although some men seem consciously
- willing to share larger portions of that terrain with women, what
- little evidence we have to date seems to suggest that much of it is
- still dominated by men. Larry Landwehr is obviously one of the men
- unwilling to give up an inch of his cyberspace.
-
- Thirdly, Jim Thomas also makes reference to a paper prepared by
- members of Bay Area Women In Telecommunications (BAWIT) for CFP '93.
- In it, they note that women's access to computers and modems, and,
- hence, the nets, is more restricted than men's access. This serves,
- also, to silence many women in this particular communications medium.
- One of the speakers at that CFP '93 session was herself a computer
- professional who talked of other women programmers, systems analysts,
- etc., who found their career advancement impeded because they felt
- intimidated by remarks made by males in their field, both f2f and in
- technical discussion lists. Her response was to found SYSTERS, a
- discussion list limited to women participants.
-
- Founding of separate lists can be construed as "equal opportunity."
- The access is obviously there. And I support the notion that women
- (and men) who want to form some separate lists should be allowed to do
- so. But court battles have been fought in the US in the past about the
- fiction of "separate but equal" opportunities. It should come as no
- surprise that some women feel that separate does not always mean
- equal, and that subtle and blatant sexism continues to exist in this
- medium. Making that observation, based on feminist or other
- theoretical perspectives, should not be grounds for further
- intimidation or derision.
-
- In a book written in an entirely different substantive arena (third
- world agriculture), Robert Chambers notes: "Male predominance and
- dominance in organisations is so marked and so widespread that to many
- men it is, quite simply, natural, and the question of deliberate
- action to increase the status of numbers of women staff does not
- arise." [1] Chambers suggests that social science (particularly in
- relation to agricultural studies, but I believe also in studies of
- other technical areas) has used as its evaluative standard a white
- male-oriented "dogma" (to borrow from Landwehr). Such use, however
- rooted in history, could stand correction.
-
- Donna Haraway further suggests that that white male standard has
- corrupted previous studies because its represents a partial
- perspective. She notes: "No wonder Max [Headroom] gets to have a naive
- sense of humor and a kind of happily regressive, preoedipal sexuality,
- a sexuality that we ambivalently--with dangerous incorrectness--had
- imagined to be reserved for lifelong inmates of female and colonized
- bodies and maybe also white male computer hackers in solitary
- electronic confinement." [2] Her discussion proceeds to the biological
- sciences, and doesn't dwell on computers, but among her points is that
- women's roles, contributions and needs have been largely ignored in
- such studies. Why should the same be true in the burgeoning area of
- computer studies?
-
- I have admitted (repeatedly) that the data we have regarding gender in
- computer mediated communication are slim. And I'm willing to admit that
- things change even as academics are studying them and journalists are
- writing about them. But what we do have is rather dismal looking to
- some women (and some men). While some women are silenced, those who do
- speak up risk the kind of harassment Larry Landwehr's remarks
- represent. I suspect those who believe respect is as important as
- equal access and free speech will continue to take the heat.
-
- Finally, while the intention may (or may not) be benign, the effect of
- these various "small" problems appears to be a systematic exclusion of
- women from full participation in the net community. We should not
- arbitrarily exclude a feminist perspective from the study of that
- apparently systematic exclusion.
-
- And, having said all that, I still support Landwehr's right to say
- what he has said. Personally, I find it offensive, but I can't seem to
- ignore it.
-
- ++++++++++++++ [1] Chambers, Robert. 1983. _Rural Development: Putting
- the First Last_. Longman Scientific and Technical: Essex, England. (p
- 175)
-
- [2] Haraway, Donna. 1988. "Situated Knowledges: The Science Question
- in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective," _Feminist
- Studies_, 14(3):575-599. (The quote is from pp 575-6.)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.31
- ************************************
-
-