Satire *should* be offensive to its target, if it's to have any bite at all.

That said, I think explicitly stated anti-harassment policies are a very
positive thing. The harrassment of women at tech conferences is a serious
problem, and the FLOSS world is especially bad.

José, do you know any hacker women whom you respect, and who attend tech
conferences and gatherings like the GHM?

If so, you should consider discussing this with them, and asking for their
take on the matter.

The simple fact that women and men are usually easily distinguished
visually means that the people around them can treat them so differently
that a woman and a man can attend the same event and come away with
completely different experiences of it. The consequence is that even
something as basic as "common sense", since it is derived from one's
everyday experience, can diverge between men and women.

The only way around this is to find a woman you respect and ask her about
it.
On Aug 12, 2014 8:55 AM, "John Darrington" <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 03:40:41PM +0200, Ludovic Court??s wrote:
>
>      I can sympathize with the rejection of institutionalized political
>      correctness that (I think) Jos?????s message is about.  After all,
> the GHM
>      audience is small and should be able to address problems through
>      discussion, without resorting to a lawyer-jargon policy.
>
> It is not so small.  If everyone who registered turns up we will have over
> 100 people.
> I think this is a record for GHM.  There could be many reasons for such a
> great response.
> One possible reason, is that people decided to come after they saw we had
> this "policy".
>
> I didn't write the text, but I think it is targeted not at the core
> hackers, who like
> somebody said, know that we don't suffer from the problem to which it
> alludes.  Instead,
> it is for the benefit of people who have never before attended, in case
> such a problem is
> endemic.   There have certainly been problems like it at some of the "open
> source" conferences.
>
>
>      Yet, as Neal very well explained, the free software movement should be
>      about inclusion.  When someone talks in public, they should seek to be
>      welcoming to everyone in the audience.  Inserting ???explicit sexual
>      language or imagery??? or ???comments related to gender, sexual
> orientation,
>      disability??? etc. in a technical talk may amuse some, and exclude
> others.
>
>
> I agree.  I didn't see that Jose said he intended to insert any of those
> things.
>
>
> --
> PGP Public key ID: 1024D/2DE827B3
> fingerprint = 8797 A26D 0854 2EAB 0285  A290 8A67 719C 2DE8 27B3
> See http://sks-keyservers.net or any PGP keyserver for public key.
>
>
>

Reply via email to