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I just read a Medium essay by Amber Yust (Amber) about being offered Stack Overflow swag as a top 100 reputation user. She was initially disappointed that the choice of t-shirt size did not include women's sizes, a pet peeve of female programmers (including myself). She was pleasantly surprised to receive an apology from Jay Hanlon (Jaydles), Stack Exchange VP of Community Growth, ultimately followed by an appropriately fitting t-shirt. Amber concludes:

This is one “nerd shirt” (as one of my friends refers to tech company logo shirts) that I will definitely wear. I’m proud of the Stack Exchange folks for doing the right thing in this case, and I hope other companies will follow in their footsteps.

I wanted to share the kudos with the Stack Overflow community, as well as my own experience that Stack Overflow is a safe place for women to use their real identities, something I've told my primarily female students. (This post describes why I would not advise that for some other programmer forums.) I credit the moderation system, which is both well designed and applied.

I had trouble coming up with a title for this post, since the main benefit of Stack Overflow to female programmers is the same as that for all programmers: answers to technical questions. (Substitute programming for videogames in the following cartoon.)

cartoon about guys either deriding or insulting a girl who plays videogames, instead of just playing videogames with her

To make this more of a discussion, I'll ask this question: In what other ways does Stack Overflow do a better job (or could it do a better job) at being welcoming to women (or other people who sometimes feel unsafe or unwelcome at other programming sites)?

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    Strange as it sounds, I think it's probably the lack of a community (in certain regards) on Stack Overflow that make it more welcoming to women. So long as SO is focused on answers to technical questions, and not community building, then a user's identity/gender/whatever have no influence on how they are treated on the site. With this approach, gender discrimination and things of that nature don't become issues, as their lack of relevance is implied by the functioning of the site.
    – miradulo
    May 1, 2015 at 18:18
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    What I find very interesting as that as of now, this question has been downvoted as much as it has been upvoted. Apparently even discussing women in programming is verboten to half the developer community.
    – Heather
    May 1, 2015 at 18:19
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    @Heather Right now, I'm torn. I want to downvote this because gender doesn't matter, at least to me, on this site. Everyone is a person, and so making call outs about one specific gender or the other isn't something I feel needs to be discussed. I also want to upvote this because I believe that women are a minority in the tech world and I want to promote the fact that I believe everyone is welcome and don't want to see anyone scared away because of their gender, ethnicity, or what have you. So, I won't vote either way. May 1, 2015 at 18:23
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    Every post that I've seen on this topic has been downvoted, @Heather. My sense is that a lot of people think that it's not something that needs discussing.
    – jscs
    May 1, 2015 at 18:26
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    I upvoted this because I have seen far worse topics be discussed. This is a discussion after all. Phrasing in the topic of gender can be hard, in both directions, or all 3 (or however many groups there are), and that makes it hard to address. That plays out here, where your question doesn't seem to be very inviting to answer, as it is hard to tell what StackOverflow does towards women that it does not do towards non women. Perhaps a better phrasing would have been to address ways in which the format of Stack Overflow reduces the feeling users have of being unsafe or unwelcome in general.
    – Travis J
    May 1, 2015 at 18:35
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    I just find it a little funny that almost two weeks ago this was asked and there were numerous mentions of being afraid to reveal being a woman here on SO. (Not to mention it was downvoted to oblivion, but it was a bit different of a question.) Now this post is mentioning how women can reveal themselves on SO without fear. Seeing as I've never experienced the former on SO, I'm glad to see this post.
    – Kendra
    May 1, 2015 at 18:37
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    @MIchael: Gender shouldn't matter, but we do not yet live in that world. If people are being perfectly rational, it wouldn't matter. But we all have our biases, and we all manage them differently, for better or for worse. In the real world, gender does matter, even if it shouldn't. Therefore, a discussion of these things is IMO perfectly valid and reasonable, not because it addresses the hypothetical perfect reality, but because it moves the needle on how people manage their biases -- hopefully in the direction of that perfect reality.
    – Heather
    May 1, 2015 at 18:57
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    I actually think being a women on SO especially one with a nice picture is actually very helpful. I've seen numerous posts by girls with pretty pictures that garnered many responses when they clearly should've been flagged or didn't follow the standard format. Whereas if anyone else (male or female) with or without a picture would've been told immediately that they need to fix their question. And in that regard SO serves (some) women better. I'm not saying its right or even that its SO specific, but its something I've noticed
    – andrew
    May 1, 2015 at 19:04
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    @MichaelIrigoyen Thanks for your thoughtful comment. I'd say that thinking "gender shouldn 't matter online" isn't the same as thinking "gender doesn't matter online". The former should be true (at least on professional websites), but the latter usually is not. I hope people followed my link to another post of mine to see why I believe that. May 1, 2015 at 19:05
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    @andrew Given that there are all sorts of malformed questions from users that don't appear to be female nor have a pretty picture that get plenty of responses, I believe you would have a hard time proving that, or validating it at all really. Maybe you're just noticing the girls with pretty pictures more.
    – miradulo
    May 1, 2015 at 19:08
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    @andrew If anything that proves that gender (or its perception) does matter as much as folks like to declare that it doesn't.
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    May 1, 2015 at 19:33
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    @espertus Thank you for starting this discussion. As much as I love Stack Overflow, I hate the "we don't see gender/race/whatever, everyone is just a user" argument. No, we're not building a social network, but ignoring the fact that everyone here is still human (with a few exceptions =)) is misguided, so conversations like this are important.
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    May 1, 2015 at 19:48
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    I don't think the SO community itself differs much from wider "tech" community, it's basically the same people and they probably hold the same biases, it's just that SO have been largely succesful in putting content before users. I don't even look at the username/picture when reading a question or an answer. It just never mattered to me because of the way the site is built. It's just so wonderfully non-personal.
    – ivarni
    May 1, 2015 at 20:49
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    @Jongware: Ah, I see Lightness was finally able to fix his user name. May 1, 2015 at 20:58
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    Part of this may be the assumption that a person is male by default. Without any obvious indicators that a person is female, people tend to assume that they're male, even if there aren't any indicators that the person is male either.
    – BSMP
    May 1, 2015 at 21:20

6 Answers 6

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Two questions; two answers:

  1. One other thing that works today: Moderation by the community. Ironically, I think one of the biggest challenges to making the average user feel welcome also helps prevent the outright sewage you see on many other user-generated sites. Because we not only empower, but encourage users to edit, prune, flag, and generally be part of keeping the site safe, civil and respectful, it is basically impossible to find any of the flagrant, outright bigotry and hate speech that clutters up sites that take a more passive approach to moderation.

  2. One thing I'd like to see more of: Visible role models from more groups. Caveat: If they are comfortable doing so. To be clear, I do understand why women in particular often have much more apprehension about sharing their identities online than men do, and I respect that 100%. But for those that are comfortable, I think the more we see female, black, latin*, native american, and all other kind of faces on the user pages, the more obvious this may be to others in those groups: This is not one of those internet sites where someone spewing bile or asking you to show them anything will be tolerated. Our community doesn't allow it.

    Again, everyone has their own comfort level for their personal online anonymity, but if you DO feel safe and comfortable sharing some aspects of who you are, I'd encourage you to do it. Avatar, first name, whatever. And that goes for ALL groups. It's less important for a boring old white dude like me, because younger white dudes are less likely likely to be nervous from bigoted BS on other sites, but we're all a signal to somebody that others who associate with your experience in some way have chosen to make an online home here.

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    Very well said. I've found SO to be an extremely welcoming community to a young beginner programmer such as myself so long as I comply with the rules set forth by answer number 1. I personally can't wait to feel like I know enough, and of course have enough rep, to step up during a moderator election and help out around the community more. I'm glad the SE team is supportive in diversity overall, and not just on the gender issue.
    – Kendra
    May 1, 2015 at 19:45
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    Speaking of "being a signal to somebody": even old white dudes can be role models for other old people (of any race/gender/etc.), given the stereotype of tech as a young person's field. (On the other hand, we stopped displaying age in profiles for just this reason...) May 1, 2015 at 21:30
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    Agreed, @JeffreyBosboom. Even though I've always been out on SO about my name and gender (in my avatar), I kept quiet about my age, being over 40. May 2, 2015 at 12:09
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    @JeffreyBosboom Old white dudes can be role models by speaking out against bias. You set a good example for others, including those who only take a concern seriously if it is raised by someone who looks like them. May 2, 2015 at 19:57
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I think others have nailed the head on why/how Stack Exchange is a successful community/non-community. The shining star of all of the sites is the content. And all discussions, interactions and such are always geared around content.

That said—and I’ll say it again—the tech world just has lots of heavy duty gender issues to deal with. As a guy participating in these forums, I think the best thing others can do is to simply treat this site as it is: A technical resource that is extremely open and extremely well regulated. And on that note, if sexist abuse or behavior appears, smack it down right away.

Interestingly the only place I have ever been heavily downvoted—but also heavily upvoted to compensate—has been on Workplace StackExchange posts such as this one on some guy being slapped at work by someone for encouraging sexual harassment as well as this one on some coworker’s “sexy desktops” at work. Of note is not just the downvotes, but my initial postings of both of my answers—which are fairly straightforward and admitting sexism exists—garnered now deleted comments saying straight out I should be “banned” and my answer be “deleted immediately” by users I assume are guys.

Two things ridiculous about those reactions: One, you hate what I—or someone says—here then downvote it. You feel I have offended someone to a level a moderator should be alerted, do that… Alert a moderator… But walking into the comments with a torch afire calling for my banning? What kind of mental disconnect creates that reaction?

And the point of my example? Simple: I believe the community should be extra vigilant about loons who abuse others in comments. That’s where it starts. You need to essentially roll-up a proverbial newspaper, and whack that other abusive commenter right away. Of course flag it for a moderator, but a flag is not seen by the original poster: If you see bad behavior call it out immediately in the comment to defend the original comment and assure the original poster this community is on their side. While moderation tools are effective, there are still humans here and basic human reassurance that the original poster is fine, the commenter is clown and we are all on the same side should be made.

A great example of the community coming around a user who—I believe and all signs point to it—was abused because of her gender is brought up in this question: “What do I do about receiving an offensive email from another user on Stack Overflow?” The offense the original poster was engaged in? Editing posts and earning rep; behavior the site encourages. What ensues seemed to be a “you don’t earn real rep that way” war that escalated into a personal e-mail being sent to the community member. Read that thread. The problem was solved wonderfully.

And all this yammering means simply one thing: All community members are valid. And human reassurance against truly loony behavior is the best way—in my opinion—one can make this place a more comfortable place for all regardless of gender.

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    Agreed on calling out - all the comments will eventually be wiped anyway so there's no harm in using the tools you have, for what they're designed for. Just be careful not to start a flame war, or walk away soon as.
    – BoltClock
    May 2, 2015 at 4:41
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I'm a Lesbian, Eskimo, Midget, Left-Handed, Ninja, Albino and I've always felt welcome here, but that's probably because such things shouldn't matter in a professional community and until now I've never talked about it because it isn't the topic of the site.

Seriously though...

I've been on the site for a few years now and the only time I've seen this sort of thing come up at all is when someone posts something like this here on Meta. Basically "How can we be more gender neutral" or "More inviting" or my personal favorite "Stop using pronouns"

I really don't mean to seem insensitive, but the beauty of this place is that we don't get too distracted by these tangents.

Whenever someone is being offensive, it usually gets handled quickly and without too much fuss.

So...

Am I just not seeing some significant, underlying tensions?
Or are we trying to solve a problem that our community doesn't seem to have?

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In what other ways does Stack Overflow do a better job (or could it do a better job) at being welcoming to women (or other people who sometimes feel unsafe or unwelcome at other programming sites)?

How does being a man/woman/unicorn make it different when asking a question on Stack Overflow? As far as I know, there is no field "I am a male/female from Asia/UK/whatever" that you have to fill in before asking/answering the question.

You identity is hidden and no one knows who exactly asked a question. When someone is answering a question, he is not checking a profile of the asker and then spending hours trying to figure out the sex of the asker to do something like this:

Ah, this is a female from Spain, let me just ignore her and spend some time answering questions from males from UK

As far as I know, people are answering questions based on the quality of the question, interest in a particular topic and willingness to gain extra experience points.

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    There are name and avatar fields which viewers use to deduce the gender of a user if they have filled those out - of course, just because you put up a photo of a man or woman or unicorn doesn't mean the owner of the account is in fact that.
    – BoltClock
    May 2, 2015 at 11:15
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    @BoltClock just to tell you the fun fact. When I had an picture of an attractive girl, I significantly increased the number of views of my profile. I can not say that anything changed related to my reputation or people suddenly became more rude or less responsive. Regarding a photo, here I totally agree with you: for example looking at your avatar, many people would agree that the picture is more suited for a girl than for a man, but I highly doubt that this somehow stops you from getting good answers or alienate people against you. May 2, 2015 at 18:51
  • Oh, yeah, about that...
    – BoltClock
    May 4, 2015 at 15:22
  • @BoltClock was not able to understand what was this comment about. I do not see any alienation/rudeness in that comment. May 4, 2015 at 19:11
  • The comment is a mocking one.
    – BoltClock
    May 6, 2015 at 18:55
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I don't think this topic specifically relates to just gender bias on any professional online forum.

If I can be so bold as to say:

Ways Stack Overflow is effective at providing a gender-neutral experience

The Internet is often a mean insensitive place. You'll get trolls on almost any thread or forum. I actually distinctly remember a user that was on an epic spree just as I joined Stack Overflow a few years ago. (Side note: I laughed a little when he got blocked for whatever duration it was.)

I do agree maybe before Amber received the T-Shirt she should have been asked as to what fit she needed/preferred, but also bear in mind Stack Overflow is an online forum, not retail shop, so they can be forgiven for not having a 100% accurate clothing distribution flow (I second the kudos for the way Stack Overflow handled it :)) I've been victim to the reverse and won a prize that was quite girly in nature... go figure. It made for a great story, and started a weird fascination with unicorns.

I really think that what makes a space gender equal, is by doing "nothing special". Same treatment to all, different races, gender, sizes, ages, etc.

Is it up to THIS forum to police it to the death? That's still to be determined... I think the best route forward is to focus on the purpose of what Stack Overflow is, and if whatever content breaks the rules of conduct then address it, but also take things with a pinch of salt... don't prosecute a poor guy person with broken English for calling a girl, sir or vice versa.

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    We have found that with spam, "policing it to death" does seem to be the only way to keep it in check. Even with all the systems in place people just keep on trying, So perhaps the same approach is required for "isms" as people just love being arseholes on the internet.
    – ChrisF Mod
    May 4, 2015 at 13:53
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    @ChrisF, to be honest... in my experience SO has been the exception. Maybe thanks to all the (relentless) work the mods put in before I even notice. So many thanks for that :)... I just can't believe that people feel the need to be destructive, when the latter results in a much better society and we all get to be friends May 4, 2015 at 13:57
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The following is not a new idea, but maybe it is one of these things that needs to be reiterated until it is universally adopted.

We should all make sure that we're not using language that makes assumptions about posters being male. This is primarily a concern in comments, when we refer to other posters. The most common case is personal pronouns. It's fairly easy to avoid them once you get in the habit, and I encourage everybody to adopt this policy.

Let's use a few hypothetical examples to demonstrate how gender specific personal pronouns can be avoided.

Wrong:

BoltClock said that he does not like unicorns.

Possible alternatives that avoid the male pronoun:

BoltClock mentioned not liking unicorns.

BoltClock talked about not liking unicorns.

BoltClock said that they do not like unicorns.

The first two forms flow just as well as the original, an are actually shorter. The last form with the plural pronoun may sounds a little awkward at first. But I think it has become common enough that people are getting used to it.

Wrong:

BoltClock explained this in an earlier comment. He said that unicorns do exist.

Alternatives:

BoltClock explained in an earlier comment that unicorns do exist.

BoltClock explained this in an earlier comment. BoltClock said that unicorns do exist.

BoltClock explained this in an earlier comment. They said that unicorns do exist.

As these examples show, possible options to avoid gender specific pronouns include:

  • Restructure the sentence to not need a personal pronoun at all.
  • Replace the pronoun by the username, repeating it if necessary.
  • Replace the pronoun by "the OP" if the user is the poster of the question.
  • Use plural pronouns.

While this may seem minor, it makes it clear that we do not make assumptions about posters being male.

IMHO, it is probably ok to use the gender specific pronouns if a poster clearly identifies themselves. But it's still better to err on the side of caution. For example, concluding it from the name can be tricky, particularly since SO is so international. Names that are primarily used for one gender in some countries can be used for the other gender in other countries.

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    @RetoKoradi This is an interesting point. I have generally become used to people referring to me as "he", to the point at which "he/she" was a little jarring. However, I realized that my profile is actually completely gender neutral to pretty much everyone, so the "he" was a complete assumption. From that point on, I made an attempt to refer to the poster as "the poster" or by username. +1.
    – k_g
    May 3, 2015 at 20:02
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    I find it extremely difficult to read "BoltClock said that they do not like unicorns." as meaning anything other than "there is a group of people, and, according to Boltclock, those people do not like unicorns". While singular they works as a drop-in replacement for "he" or "she" in some contexts, I don't think this is one of them.
    – senshin
    May 4, 2015 at 0:40
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    I too think 'they' is consufing. Maybe we should invent another gender neutral pronoun, like 'ee'. "Boltclock said ee doesn't like unicorns". And instead of 'male/female', we could use just 'ale'.
    – GolezTrol
    May 4, 2015 at 12:31
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    I honestly don't understand how society has brought us to a point where just being male is considered anti-feminine (If that makes sense). Using male pronouns doesn't mean we're pro-male all of a sudden, and heaven forbid that we accidentally call a female by a male pronoun. Hell hath no fury like a person incorrectly gender addressed over the internet. If someone wants to address someone with a gender specific pronoun then by all means do it.. it's part of the English language, Besides, if said person made an incorrect assumption based on the gender, then she/he/it can correct the response? May 4, 2015 at 13:09
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    While this might not be popular opinion, I'd like to speak up on this topic. I personally am never offended by wrongfully being referred to as a male on the internet. The main reason being that the internet is gender neutral and the offending party general doesn't have foul intentions. With that being said, I don't intend on belittling your point, but I think it's important that we focus less on political correctness and more on equal rights. I'd much rather see the statistics for women pay in tech rise than the rightness of third-person pronouns :P May 4, 2015 at 14:02
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    ^ Further on that point by @CarrieKendall, I use "he" by default whenever I don't know the sex of the person, because I am a "he" and that's how I experience reality. If someone says "I'm a female" then I will refer to them as "she". No harm, no foul. Likewise, I don't get offended when females go around saying "she" and "her" by default when speaking generally or when speaking about people whose sex they don't know, because that's how they experience reality. I think political correctness goes too far in this case (usually), and just makes people seem self-righteous or sanctimonious.
    – TylerH
    May 4, 2015 at 14:30

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