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UbuntuWomen

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Ubuntu is a Linux distribution, and an open source project which bills itself as "Linux for human beings" and as being a more approachable, friendlier Linux distribution. The word "Ubuntu" is an African term which is hard to describe, but encompasses humanity, openness, generosity of spirit, etc. (See Ubuntu (philosophy) on Wikipedia.) This ideal is reflected in the Ubuntu community's code of conduct, which all community members must sign.

Women in Ubuntu[]

A 2006 census of the Ubuntu community[1] found 2.4% women.

The Ubuntu Women group runs a mailing list, website, and IRC channel to support women in the Ubuntu community. Anyone who is interested in supporting women in Ubuntu is welcome in those forums (i.e. they are mixed gender forums.)

P1000407

About half of the women who attended UDS Lucid: Back: Surbhi Palande, Elizabeth Krumbach, Laura Czajkowski, Ursula Junque, Ara Pulido, Amber Graner; Front: Marianna, Maria, Claire Newman, Mackenzie Morgan, Jane Silber

The following women are notable Ubuntu contributors and community members:

See also: List of women in Open Source










Code of Conduct[]

The Ubuntu Code of conduct is a document expressing what is expected of Ubuntu contributors. It says that contributors will:

  • Be considerate.
  • Be respectful.
  • Be collaborative.
  • When we disagree, we consult others.
  • When we are unsure, we ask for help.
  • Step down considerately.

The full text is available at http://www.ubuntu.com/community/conduct

An additional leadership code of conduct applies to those in leadership roles.

The code of conduct was updated in October 2009, with the following goals:

  • Broaden the scope to include contributors who are not developers or packagers
  • Refer to community structures that have emerged since the CoC was first written (eg. the Community Council)
  • Remove joking reference to Mark Shuttleworth being perfect (at least one person chose not to sign the CoC because of this[2])

The Ubuntu Code of Conduct is released under a Creative Commons license, and has inspired some other projects (eg. the Sugar project) to have similar codes of conduct.

At times there have been complaints that the Ubuntu Code of Conduct is not enforced. The Ubuntu Code of Conduct incident describes one such situation which occurred in 2007, where someone posted a sexist joke to an Ubuntu mailing list but was not reprimanded for it. Instead, Ubuntu's community manager called for balance/moderation in applying the CoC, and the woman who had complained ended up leaving the Ubuntu community.

Marketing[]

Ubuntu's marketing materials generally include people of various genders and races. Ubuntu tshirts are also available in women's sizes[3].

Ubuntu Women[]

The Ubuntu Women subproject aims to support and mentor women contributing or interested in contributing to Ubuntu.

Incidents[]

Many incidents involving women in Ubuntu stem from the desire to be inclusive of women, but awkwardness in expressing it in a way which does not marginalise women who are already using Ubuntu. See, eg:

Other incidents include:

Further reading/commentary/etc[]

References[]