On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 11:58 AM, Sarah Stierch <sarah.stierch(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Hi. Some people can't speak up about what happened
for legal reasons.
I do think there is a double standard. But I have before my involvement in
wiki. Living in the US it's a way of life.
Some women who were impacted by those posts were harassed by people
involved way prior to making their own minor and harmless in the end game
errors which got them "in trouble." Women just did not take action or make
it public. No one should have to post on a public website that they have
been sexually harassed to get help. And "bad people on the internet are
common" is the general response.
There are also male staff members who did things considered illegal in the
US courts who still have their jobs (some don't work there anymore but it
shocked many of us women they were allowed to stay so long given their
behaviors). Amazing how that works.
But, some of us can't and are afraid to talk about it. Some of us just
want closure but the trolls and internet won't give it to us. (And it's not
just me...)
And no I am not elaborating on or offlist. So don't ask. I gave up
fighting after I lost my job. So I commend those who still care.
I love the Twitter feed, by the way.
Sarah
On Sep 10, 2014 8:41 AM, "Nathan" <nawrich(a)gmail.com> wrote
Hi Sarah, I'm sorry if I was unclear. I was understanding Carol as saying
that there were sexist comments in the ANI she linked (where Andreas'
quoted comment was found). I read the entire AN/I thread and the editor
review and found none.
Of course I realize that there are many, many instances of terrible sexual
harassment on the Internet and throughout the history of Wikipedia. My
point about muddying the waters is that these examples are enough to
convince anyone open to being convinced that there is a problem. It is
unnecessary to attach these real issues to examples that don't reflect
sexism or gender-related harassment.
That said, even though I don't see sexism or gender in the example, it is a
good example of the spiteful, bitter, battlefield atmosphere that
characterizes disputes on Wikipedia.