Hey all,
I hope its okay if I add to the conversation here a little, which seems to be very
thoughtful and productive thus far. I'm especially impressed at the intention to hear
from the experiences of women, which is really cool. Kudos to the men that expressed the
importance of our limited experience, and to the women who spoke up.
I am not a sudo room member and am rarely I'm rarely in that space, but Jake
mentioned me at the end of the first email and CC-ed me. As a member of Noisebridge and
someone in the bay hackerspace communities, this is a subject close to my heart that I
think it is helpful to think about it, and maybe we can offer some cross-hackerspace
solutions to eachother.
Since Jake mentioned this in the first email, here is the Noisebridge Anti-Harassment
Policy:
https://www.noisebridge.net/wiki/Anti-Harassment_Policy
Now for my 2 cents:
Note, there is nothing in there that states you cannot ask someone out at NB. However, I
am strongly in favor of definitely limiting that behavior (as I voiced to my friend the
other night) because women have complained to me VERY OFTEN about being sick of being hit
on at Noisebridge. Almost all of the women hackers have left the space over the years,
and I have friends that are women that used to used to hack there and have told me
outright they will not return because of being hit on all the time (even with something as
simple as "what are you working on?" and "Do you want a tour of the
space?" being asked all the time, when they had been regulars for months, if not
years.)
A woman I was having a meeting with recently got interrupted by some pickup artist fool
(in the middle of our meeting) and asked to lunch. Was this harassment? I'm not
sure, but it was damn inappropriate.
Kathy makes a solid point, saying
"I think one thing that always comes up at sudo/ccl is where to draw the line between
bad social skills and unintentionally harmful behavior."
I would like to add that pickup artists and creeps are *very* skilled at *intentionally
blurring this line* it is, in fact, what they might be best at. A lot of us don't
have the best social skills, but when you go out of your way to interrupt people and ask
someone out I think you are behaving inappropriately (talking about NB here).
Do we decide to never ask people out at a hackerspace? One of my close friends who is an
awesome hacker woman is an advocate of this, and it makes a lot of sense. However, If
someone is showing prolonged interest in me, over the course of multiple visits to the
space, then I would consider asking them out. What does that look like? I would say if a
woman came over to me to ask about my projects, my personal life, etc. on multiple
occasions and made it their business (not mine) to say hello to me all the time, then
maybe I would ask her if she wanted to share a burrito. The problem seems to arise when
*men* are initiating the contact over and over again, especially going into a different
part of the hackerspace just to engage with women.
The example Jake mentioned from the other night was a woman came to ask what a group of us
were working on, and then later in the night was looking for some scissors for her sewing.
I said she could use mine if she needed, which she seemed to appreciate. My friend
suggested that I asked her out at one point later in the night because he thought she was
into me. I had a) never seen her before in the space and b) had no reason to believe she
was initiating contact with me beyond needing tools. She asked nothing of my personal
life and did not join us in our projects or anything. So I told him I thought it would be
inappropriate to ask her out, and advocated letting women have their space to work on
their projects.
Hopefully some of this info is helpful to share, I'm really glad you are all
addressing this issue so thoughtfully! I am by no means an expert on any of this and am
very open to hearing from others if the shared views are harmful in any way.
Thanks for reading,
Zach
--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 8/3/16, Mary Ward <maryhbw(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Subject: Re: [sudo-discuss] someone at sudo was a creep and it's a problem
To: "Kathy Buehmann" <kathy.buehmann(a)gmail.com>
Cc: "Patrik D'haeseleer" <patrikd(a)gmail.com>om>, "Marc Juul"
<juul(a)labitat.dk>dk>, "Jake" <jake(a)spaz.org>rg>, "Zach T"
<organic_unity(a)yahoo.com>om>, "sudo-discuss"
<sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org>rg>, "cultlabsboard(a)googlegroups.com"
<cultlabsboard(a)googlegroups.com>om>, "Tamari Kirtadze"
<kirtadzet(a)gmail.com>
Date: Wednesday, August 3, 2016, 7:26 PM
Hi
All,
I have interacted with
Sean on many occasions and I have not found him to be
threatening in the least. I believe that we are lacking a
general enculturation program for the Omni.
I personally was not aware
that you cannot ask people on dates at the Omni or Sudoroom
specifically. I am glad to know this so I don't make a
similar mistake.
Kind Regards,
MarySent from my
iPhone
On Aug 3, 2016, at 6:34
PM, Kathy Buehmann <kathy.buehmann(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
I agree, I think
we should hear Jake's female friend's account before
moving forward.
When he was speaking with me, he seemed
very enthusiastic and excited to share his idea with those
of us at the social. I did not mind him dominating the
conversation as it felt that he was doing so more to convey
his excitement than to try to quiet anyone else. He promptly
left once he had finished "venting" (positive
connotation) and I figured he'd be busy working on his
projects again.
I had not thought much about
yesterday's conversation with him until now. I suppose
after this interaction I probably would not go out of my way
to share my own projects with him, but not out of spite or
malice. More, he just seemed really into his own thing. I
feel there are tons of people at CCL who would be psyched to
hear about stuff I'm working on, so I'd simply
choose to share it with them. His loss, from my point of
view.
That being
said, he was not hitting on me, asking me out, preventing me
from speaking, or anything that aggressive. If that had been
the case I probably would have found someone else to talk to
or worked on my computer until he left the conversation. I
imagine it would have taken quite a bit for me to directly
address him about it, whether verbally or with a
hypothetical yellow card. I cannot think of anything off the
top of my head that would spurn me to do this, short of him
flat out insulting me or becoming physical in any way. At
this point however I imagine many others in the conversation
would notice and also take action.
I'm not really sure
what to do moving forward but wanted to share my perspective
as I interacted with him last night. I personally have not
had or witnessed any negative interactions with him and
appreciate his enthusiasm and energy.
I think one thing that always comes
up at sudo/ccl is where to draw the line between bad social
skills and unintentionally harmful behavior. The tricky
thing is it depends on the person on the receiving end of it
all. I know there have been a few peeps at ccl I don't
feel super comfortable around, but if no one else seems to
take offense then I'll attribute it to personal bias on
my part and try to minimize contact. That being said I am
rarely in the space alone with said people so maybe that
would change my opinion.
Wish I could attend the meeting
tonight. Thanks for addressing this everyone and keep us in
the loop.
On Wed, Aug 3, 2016 at 5:32
PM, Patrik D'haeseleer <patrikd(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Sean is a regular CCL member, and has been working
on the liquid handling robot in the basement for almost two
months now.
I've
interacted with him on several occasions. He is definitely
enthusiastic and talkative, but he didn't strike me as a
problem before. But then again, I'm not a woman
either.
I would really
want to hear Jake's friend's reaction to this event,
and the opinion of some of the other women in CCL he's
been interacting with over the past several
weeks.
Patrik
On Wed, Aug 3, 2016 at 4:49
PM, Marc Juul <juul(a)labitat.dk>
wrote:
On Wed, Aug 3, 2016 at 2:17 AM,
Jake <jake(a)spaz.org>
wrote:
Dear
Sudoroom,
sorry for streaming mode, i'm not sure how to talk about
this.
there's this guy who's been at sudo a few times
during hardware hacking tuesdays. I think his name is Sean
but i can't remember for sure now.
he likes talking about his workout routine, and getting
rich, and says he's going to invent bio-drones and says
he's working on some secret project that's going to
show to elon musk and it's going to make him super
rich.
well tonight he crossed the line from annoying to
unacceptably creepy.
tonight a friend of mine came to sudoroom so we could use
the robot to cut holes in these christmas ornaments. It
was a big project that took hours and a lot of focus. Sean
(is that his name?) was on her like glue the entire time,
trying to be helpful, talking to her.
It made me uncomfortable, but she's a grownup and can
speak for herself, but at the same time the power dynamic
and assertiveness imbalance was quite stark and I really
wanted to say something.
But i didn't know what to say.
the first time he went away for a minute, which was after
what seemed like a long time, i said to my friend "you
know, if anyone's bothering you here you can tell them
to go away" because i couldn't think of anything
better to say. maybe i should have offered to tell him to
go away? but that would have only parried the problem that
one time.
Of course he soon came back. I think we were both trying
to ignore him as best we could, and we did get some good
work done thanks to Zack and Fenn, who are great. But
eventually they left and it was just the three of us.
I don't know what other things he said to my friend when
i wasn't watching, but I did see him eventually ask her
on a date. She told him no, and then he made it very clear
to everyone that he was fine with that and not bothered by
it at all, because he's not bothered by anything.
I was super bothered by it. I wanted to tell him to leave
right then, but I really didn't want to talk to him, I
just wanted him to go away on his own. I guess eventually
he did.
I want two things. I want Sudoroom to ask this person to
take a break from the space so that he can study up on our
anti-harrassment policy and maybe write us an essay about
why it's unacceptable to mack on people in sudoroom.
and I also want us to look into how we can make it clearer
to people like him, and to his targets, that sudoroom is
expressly a safe place from this kind of behavior. I would
like for there to be a sign that I can point to in moments
like that, so that I don't have to try to say it with my
own words, in front of other people.
it's a complex issue, because if someone is being
talkative and helpful they're not necessarily doing it
as a creep move, so how do you know where to draw the
line? We can remind people to check their own intentions,
but maybe we need more ways for people who feel
uncomfortable to get relief from unwanted attention without
having to then engage the person in Lesson 101 right
then.
maybe we need yellow cards? to hand to people that say
"please go to the fridge and read the entire sign
reminding you about proper behavior in sudoroom. Do not
ask any more questions of the person who gave you this card,
they have other things they want to do now. thank
you."
Noisebridge seems to have a great vibe, at least the other
night when I was there, Zach explained to one of our friends
why it would be inappropriate to "ask someone out"
at Noisebridge. I'm not sure how their
anti-harrassment policy differs from ours, or what we could
learn from it, but I would like for us to be more
out-in-front of this issue so it doesn't come up anymore
without being addressed.
thanks for reading this, let's figure this
out.
I also interacted with this person.
Definitely some weird ego problem going on there. Pointed
out several times how skilled he is and all the things he
knows and kept repeating how he does mixed martial arts in
places where it made no sense to the conversation. He
didn't seem threatening just really intent on making me
understand how amazing he is, though the repeated references
to his martial arts skills were definitely creepy. I saw
some of his interactions with the robot arm group but
apparently not the worst of it. This is definitely a case of
someone who doesn't have a clue about social
interactions, which isn't new to sudo, but couple that
with his pushiness and I think we have a problem.
There's asking
someone on a date and then there's an evening of
imposing yourself and making others uncomfortable followed
by asking someone on a date when they're not showing any
interest.
We
could talk to him about his behavior. We could couple that
with a short-term break from the space (e.g. 1 month).
It's unlikely that he'll come back to the space
after a short term ban (few people do).
Meet in sudo or on the sudo room
riseup pad at 7 pm for a group decision on this.
--
marc/juul
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