I had two stories about gender and social media cross my computer recently.
The first was The New York Times article "Define Gender Gap? Look Up Wikipedia's Contributor List" which explained that while Wikipedia–the free, online encyclopedia "that anyone can edit"–is a top-ten internet destination with more than 3.5 million articles in English alone...less than 15% of the people volunteering to create and edit Wikipedia are women. Potentially, our culture is being defined online by a homogenous community of "wikipedians" who are almost universally white, Christian, technically-inclined, formally-educated males from the northern hemisphere between the ages of 15 and 49. At very least (ramifications to culture aside), this skews Wikipedia's content:
[Read more of Andrea Schwalm's post on women and Wikipedia over at GeekMom!]
