I'm glad to hear that Gayle.
But please remember - female admins get it bad, but, the "attention" I got, wasn't "upped" when I became an admin. Yes, i'm a bit more of a "known" person than perhaps other women in the community (right now) but...I know women (Cristamuse, Slim Virgin, just to name two) who deal with plenty of crap and *ARE NOT* admins.
Please remember..it's not just admins. The moment you become a highly active publicly identified female on Wikipedia, you are automatically prone to sexualized comments (friendly or not..."sweetie, lassie, etc." or "you're so pretty"))), harassment, and so forth.
Admins get it pretty damn bad, but non-admins get it bad too. And I don't want us to forget that, and that's why I think it's so important that women get support - any editor on that matter.
The moment you make edits to articles like "feminism" "mens rights" "pro-choice" "pro-life" "pregnancy" etc, you are in the minefield.
-Sarah
On Thu, May 9, 2013 at 6:04 PM, Gayle Karen Young gyoung@wikimedia.orgwrote:
One of the things I talked to one of the female admins about is figuring out how to better support them in the stuff they have to deal with, and it's on my radar. That's just an FYI.
On Thu, May 9, 2013 at 5:57 PM, phoebe ayers phoebe.wiki@gmail.comwrote:
(changing the topic back)
On Thu, May 9, 2013 at 5:29 PM, Sylvia Ventura slventura@gmail.comwrote:
Anne, you're absolutely right on the 'high profile'. The broader the reach, impact, exposure, the more likely you are to become the target of good and bad 'attention'. The question is, much like in real-life, the higher up you are in an organization the more 'support' and/or protection you will likely need/get, as a community should we be able to insure a similar mechanism. This community resilience won't be built on a MadMax fighting-your-way-through model (I know it's rather dramatic :)
From all the stories I've heard over the years, admins and arbitrators get the worst of it -- being in a position where you delete articles or mediate disputes on the project (and let's face it, the folks who get into arbitration-type situations on wikipedia are often not the most stable or reasonable people on earth) seems to be the most direct way to potentially exposing yourself to lots of harassment. And if you're identified as female, it's way worse.
Conversely from my experiences being pretty visible on the *organizational* side of things (and talking to colleagues), there is a low level of harassment that comes with that gig, but *nothing* like the horror stories I've heard from some admins.
This is clearly untenable; the projects need to grow experienced contributors who can serve in positions of leadership and as mentors on the projects, and we can't expect everyone to just suck it up ("so sorry, you will have to work with crazy people"). I worry that folks often just find themselves unsupported. I don't know what the answer is.
-- phoebe
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