I'm writing a paper on cyberstalking and
harassment, which I hope to
hand to the Foundation with a view to educating people about the
extent of the problem on the Wikimedia projects, and if possible
improving their responses to it.
I'd like to include some concrete examples of cyberstalking or offline
stalking that have happened to users as a result of their
participation in any of the Wikimedia projects, and particularly where
the target was picked on because they were an administrator.
[...]
I'd also like to hear from women who feel they were subjected to
additional harassment because of their sex, or from gays and members
of ethnic minorities who feel they were picked on in whole or in part
because of that.
With all due respect this seems somewhat backwards. A useful
sociological study would be: To what extent is "cyberstalking" and
harrassment a problem on Wikimedia Foundation projects, and if it is a
significant problem, what character does it take? This proposal puts the
cart behind the horse, opining, despite admittedly not having "concrete
examples", that it is a serious problem that the Foundation is not
responding to appropriately, and then trolling for anecdotes. That
strikes me as more like a class-action-lawyer's method of operating than
a valid methodology for sociology research, and I can already guess what
the results of a study carried out in that fashion are going to be,
since the proposed study outlines pretty openly what it plans to find.
-Mark