Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

A techno-feminist view on the Open Source Software development

Lin, Y.W

Authors

Y.W Lin



Contributors

Eileen Trauth
Editor

Abstract

In this article, I discuss the potential of Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) for empowering women and minority users in computing, and how the current status of women and minority users in the FLOSS development can be improved through engaging in the process of the FLOSS development. Though taking a "techno-feminist" perspective (Wajcman 2004), I am not going to reduce the complex gender issues emerging within and across the FLOSS community to a numeric question, i.e. how few women in the FLOSS community. Also, I do not consider the question as a battle between men and women. Staying away from such dichotomies, the issues I attempt to address include not only the inequality that women face in computing, but also other inequalities end users face that usually emerge from the power relationships between expert and lay (namely, developer and user) in software design. Instead of splitting women and men in the FLOSS development, this analysis helps motivate both men and women to work together, reduce the gender gap, and improve the disadvantaged statuses of women and a wider users community in the FLOSS development. I also provide three examples on how both women and men are encouraged to become mobile grassroots IT workers who support organisations and individuals with advises on technology with non-technical lay language, rather than completing technical tasks such as bugs fixing.

Citation

Lin, Y. (2006). A techno-feminist view on the Open Source Software development. In E. Trauth (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Gender and Information Technology (1148-1153). Idea Group Inc

Publication Date Jan 1, 2006
Deposit Date Mar 16, 2011
Pages 1148-1153
Book Title Encyclopedia of Gender and Information Technology