History of Feminism
Related: About this forumWILL THE INTERNET EVER BE SAFE FOR WOMEN?
After a month like this one, its worth asking: Will the Internet ever be a safe place for women? This question might seem naïve. If you are a woman with an online presence, after all, you may have grown so accustomed to Internet harassment that you cannot even imagine an alternate future. A recent poll from the Rad Campaign, Lincoln Park Strategies, and Craiglist founder Craig Newmark found that 57 percent of people who experience abuse online are women.
While this data might lead one to believe that women are only marginally more affected by Internet harassment than men, Amanda Hess at Pacific Standard puts a more qualitative face on this quantitative data. Nearly three-quarters of people who report harassment to the organization Working to Halt Online Abuse, she notes, are women. Internet accounts with feminine usernames also receive 100 sexually explicit or threatening messages a day compared to less than four per day for accounts with masculine usernames. Hess concludes, the vilest [online] communications are still disproportionately lobbed at women. For women on the Internet, vitriolic abuse is simply a fact of life.
We are accustomed to thinking that the prevalence of sexist Internet harassment is a problem with people rather than a problem with technology. Accordingly, most efforts to make the Internet a more hospitable place for women are reactive approaches that seek to address problems after they take place, rather than proactive approaches that seek to prevent harassment at its technological roots. The only way the editors of Jezebel could try to stop their rape gif problem, for example, was to individually and manually delete comments and ban commenters. Even then, commenters could continue making new accounts and posting more explicit images. Gawker Media has since stepped in with a back-end fix that hides comments from new users until Jezebel or another approved commenter has approved them.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/08/28/will-the-internet-ever-be-safe-for-women.html
Scootaloo
(25,699 posts)After all, remember John Gabriel's Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory:
That explains so much in such a simple manner
freshwest
(53,661 posts)ismnotwasm
(42,522 posts)I have very thick skin. As far as verbal safety- it goes goes more than one way, and I'd win. If I said what I wanted to say here, I'd have many more hides that the more vocal members.
But that's not the issue. Who wants to act like that? The answer, As we see, are more than a few momma's basement dwellers all the way up to "I've been married to a great woman for x amount of years". Which is, essentially hiding behind the claimed relationship to maintain some bullshit point.
So yeah, as long as one can cheerlead oneself-- or with like minded buddies--in anonymity it will never be safe, unless the culture changes and rape and dismemberment threats somehow become uncool.
That they're considered a great way to express displeasure with a point of view of women well, rape culture, misogyny and privilege are clearly in ascendent
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)not wanting ideas challenged. so calling women names, threatening them with rape, is merely an argument to ideas. moran.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1017211989