In the absence of any specific question to be answered, let me post a longer answer about why we should support this as a community. Gender discrimination in tech has been raised as a topic a couple of times on Meta recently, and on each occasion — rather than just attracting either warm support and a dose of indifference — a proportion of the reply has been strong and disgruntled opposition.
But why would this be? It seems that any initiative to make technical roles available and welcoming to women on the same terms as men ought to be universally welcomed. I think it stems at least in part from a misunderstanding of the approaches that are normally used by anti-discrimination movements, and I hope that at least some of that opposition can be overcome by explaining them.
So, one of the tools to challenge centuries-old discrimination is to develop initiatives exclusively for groups of people who have experienced discrimination, and/or use their legally-protected characteristics as a small booster to their chances of a job, access to limited educational places, and so forth. The programme under discussion here would fall under the first category, and a university that gives a few percentage points towards entrance criteria to under-represented minorities would fall under the second (I'd be minded to refer to the second category as positive discrimination or affirmative action, though some people would use these phrases for both corrective mechanisms).
Do such approaches work? I'm not sure, but I'm certainly willing to give it a go. I'm male, middle class and white, so I'm in possession of substantial privilege that, whatever hard work I might have put in, I simply did not earn myself. Whatever discriminatory societal memes have survived through the last few centuries, via whatever manner they have propagated intergenerationally, I think any of us in possession of any such advantages should be willing to help level out this playing field, even if we each can only tamp down a small clod of earth.
In the same way — and this is more rhetorical than requiring answers — anyone strongly opposing such programmes should make an effort to understand their own motives for doing so. I agree this isn't easy, and that it requires substantial introspection — no-one likes the idea that we might be influenced by our culture and upbringing to the degree that we are, even if that is what makes us human!
In particular, the opinion that women-only spaces/groups/mentoring in which women can feel empowered is "sexist" does not understand that men feel empowered, by default, everywhere (how our collective culture got to such a daft position is rather not the point, and neither is it relevant that not all men contribute to the meme's survival). Furthermore, there is no demonstrable need for men-only spaces/groups/mentoring; such a thing would only serve to increase a privilege that already exists, and would probably only ever be set up as a reactionary response anyway.
I was asked on another thread, in relation to my support for anti-discrimination measures, where we should stop. I certainly agree that, if discrimination in the future becomes negligible, or that people start to be affected by it entirely randomly (!), then such measures will no longer be needed. In the meantime, the aim is to:
create equality of opportunity, and not necessarily equality of outcome.
So, there is no movement to demand that technical departments are made up of equal proportions of each legally-protected characteristic. However, if we can get to the point where women feel that technology is a suitable career (or amateur interest) for them to the same degree that men are automatically entitled to, that would be a real win. We are, I believe, some way off.
No approach to tackling such a thorny problem will ever be perfect. Not all people of non-privileged groups have been discriminated against to the same degree, and not everyone requires a programme or anti-discrimination policy to experience equality in their particular field. Some people, indeed, will use the experience of discrimination to put double the effort in, even though they should not have to do so.
Nevertheless, assuming we all understand that discrimination still exists, let's get behind initiatives like this. And let's do so especially if we haven't experienced it, to give a hand up to those who have.
Post-script: a commenter suggests that small corrective measures that deliberately privilege women are an attack on men. This counter-argument is tackled by my above critique of accusations, originating from men, that they are the victims of a modern sexism. Whilst understandable from the speaker's perspective, this outlook is wrong because it does not take into account the (much larger) privilege imbalance in the first place.
I should say that I do not intend to render all (tech) feminism as beyond criticism, and nor is it a supportable feminist view that men cannot be victims of sexism. I spotted a rather unfortunate example here just now:
The gittip crisis is an example of the way in which men in tech only support meritocracy when it favors themselves.
Ouch! Hopefully my post, and the views of many other men who have commented under the original post, show that statement to be false.