The photo in question was taken from a series of photos of event attendees that were posted on our Facebook page in March.
This seems pretty reasonable of Techweek. They used actual attendees, so they're not oversexualizing the event like that time they posted women in bikinis to Instagram. I'm glad they took people's complaints seriously and removed the image, so I don't see a lot to complain about.
Have you seen the images? That's clearly not true. When pressed to identify the so called "eventgoers" the leaders of techweek came up empty. just a bad excuse.
"Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate for any conference venue..."
This strikes me as lazily nonspecific. Isn't sexual language and imagery a pervasive part of the human experience? Isn't the problem specifically with sexual language and imagery which disempowers and objectifies people against their will? With language as general as that, you could outlaw a glance paired with a half-smile given by someone in Victorian garb completely covered from the neck down and wrists up. I've said it before: Maybe a Victorian level of carefully maintained polite deniability could facilitate greater consensuality, so long as it's absent the Victorian level sexual inequality and doublethink. (It could also be used in the opposite direction.)
I don't disagree with the notion that the language of human sexuality has been twisted in unhealthy ways to support the status-quo power structure. I've personally been on the short end of that deal. However, I do disagree with emotionally driven backlash devoid of consideration that seeks to vilify. Traditional cultures have already tried shaming, fear, and repression as instruments of control over human sexuality. How about we start to further consensuality and open communications instead? And for that, the atmosphere created by vilification is only unhelpful.
What we have here is a fundraising rave that's using sex in its marketing of an event at a nightclub. Nightclubs are supposed to be sexually charged. It suffuses the music and couture around such venues. What if a similar event had happened at a gay club, with the photo shot with two beautiful young men in the same garb and with the same poses and facial expressions? Would Techweek have come after them?
It seems like Techweek needs to clarify its policies surrounding concurrent events. It's a typical organizational response to greatly overshoot on the side of caution. Hopefully, this will be understood as just that.
EDIT: Downvote, eh? Funny how the stance of "You're either for us or against us" is cited as a sign of George W. Bush's intellectual bankruptcy, but is the unspoken policy around subjects like this.
I didn't downvote you, but while we can all generalize and extrapolate to our preferred points, at the end of the day Techweek Chicago is not at all about "the human experience."
Techweek did clarify their policies. They said they weren't to use sexual language and imagery. Nothing you can say about people being hypersensitive can take away from the fact that this was a completely unforced error.
If you're going to reduce this to a logical contradiction, then it does take away from the gender issues. I doubt Techweek will smell like roses or deserve to come out Scott free. That doesn't mean we should set a pattern for knee-jerk vilification. (That ship may well have sailed and entered a canal to an entirely different ocean.)
It's not a logical contradiction nor knee-jerk. They came up with a code of conduct, violated its terms themselves, and now people are reacting to that news. An unforced error on Techweek's part, and reasonable to call them out on it. The only pattern is that when you do something stupid, people call you stupid.
An unforced error on Techweek's part, and reasonable to call them out on it.
The tenor and severity with which they are being called out is a bit out of whack. It's mostly out of proportion with an unintentional mistake, which probably results from emotional factors and political haymaking. It's also a mistake because of a poorly and too-generally written policy, which I am also calling out. Please re-read. That poorly and too-generally written policy is in fact my main point.
Well of course it was unintentional, nobody's saying it wasn't. It's just highly stupid, especially considering their history (http://chicagoinno.streetwise.co/2014/06/04/techweek-is-youn...). I don't agree that the policy leaves room for misinterpretation.
No. The code of conduct was a simplistic knee-jerk and simply bans everything sexual. Sexuality is a normal part of human existence. It's weird power dynamics in sexuality that are the problem. It was "designed" to stop sexism in the same sense that landmines are designed to prevent trespassing.
All the brain dead shenanigans around this only serve to cloud and confuse people about the complex and nuanced truths. History has shown that you don't solve such problems by simply repressing everything sexual.
But most people are more interested in spotlighting villains than they are in learning and solving hard problems.
I can't speak for everyone, but I downvoted you primarily because of your arrogant and generally uncivil tone and your predictions and assumptions as why people (would) downvote you.
Judging from your other comments, you can be fascinating and insightful, and I have much to learn from you especially in the field of programming. And yet your comment history is peppered with comments in a similar tone and attitude.
I can't tell if you're just tone-deaf or doing this on purpose, but I find it highly unpleasant. Plus, you're not following the guidelines:
> Resist complaining about being downmodded. It never does any good, and it makes boring reading.
> Please don't bait other users by inviting them to downmod you.
Judging from your other comments, you can be fascinating and insightful, and I have much to learn from you especially in the field of programming. And yet your comment history is peppered with comments in a similar tone and attitude.
Judging from your timing, you've been waiting until I actually get a negative score to voice this opinion. News: I generally get lots of upvotes. It's generally beneficial to ask why in the context of each comment.
Resist complaining about being downmodded.
Amazing how differently the prediction of downmodding is received depending on the popularity of the position below it.
I started on HN in the days when people were actually discouraged from downmodding people they disagreed with. I also remember when pointing out when people were wrong or when something didn't seem to make sense was simply pointing something out, not "arrogance." Aside from my (entirely accurate) prediction of karma loss, please give specific excerpts and explain your perceptions of "tone" in this thread. I maintain that you are emotionally swayed by your dislike of my position.
15 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 37.1 ms ] threadThis seems pretty reasonable of Techweek. They used actual attendees, so they're not oversexualizing the event like that time they posted women in bikinis to Instagram. I'm glad they took people's complaints seriously and removed the image, so I don't see a lot to complain about.
Edit: where were they pressed on that?
"Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate for any conference venue..."
This strikes me as lazily nonspecific. Isn't sexual language and imagery a pervasive part of the human experience? Isn't the problem specifically with sexual language and imagery which disempowers and objectifies people against their will? With language as general as that, you could outlaw a glance paired with a half-smile given by someone in Victorian garb completely covered from the neck down and wrists up. I've said it before: Maybe a Victorian level of carefully maintained polite deniability could facilitate greater consensuality, so long as it's absent the Victorian level sexual inequality and doublethink. (It could also be used in the opposite direction.)
I don't disagree with the notion that the language of human sexuality has been twisted in unhealthy ways to support the status-quo power structure. I've personally been on the short end of that deal. However, I do disagree with emotionally driven backlash devoid of consideration that seeks to vilify. Traditional cultures have already tried shaming, fear, and repression as instruments of control over human sexuality. How about we start to further consensuality and open communications instead? And for that, the atmosphere created by vilification is only unhelpful.
What we have here is a fundraising rave that's using sex in its marketing of an event at a nightclub. Nightclubs are supposed to be sexually charged. It suffuses the music and couture around such venues. What if a similar event had happened at a gay club, with the photo shot with two beautiful young men in the same garb and with the same poses and facial expressions? Would Techweek have come after them?
It seems like Techweek needs to clarify its policies surrounding concurrent events. It's a typical organizational response to greatly overshoot on the side of caution. Hopefully, this will be understood as just that.
EDIT: Downvote, eh? Funny how the stance of "You're either for us or against us" is cited as a sign of George W. Bush's intellectual bankruptcy, but is the unspoken policy around subjects like this.
Techweek did clarify their policies. They said they weren't to use sexual language and imagery. Nothing you can say about people being hypersensitive can take away from the fact that this was a completely unforced error.
The tenor and severity with which they are being called out is a bit out of whack. It's mostly out of proportion with an unintentional mistake, which probably results from emotional factors and political haymaking. It's also a mistake because of a poorly and too-generally written policy, which I am also calling out. Please re-read. That poorly and too-generally written policy is in fact my main point.
All the brain dead shenanigans around this only serve to cloud and confuse people about the complex and nuanced truths. History has shown that you don't solve such problems by simply repressing everything sexual.
But most people are more interested in spotlighting villains than they are in learning and solving hard problems.
Judging from your other comments, you can be fascinating and insightful, and I have much to learn from you especially in the field of programming. And yet your comment history is peppered with comments in a similar tone and attitude.
I can't tell if you're just tone-deaf or doing this on purpose, but I find it highly unpleasant. Plus, you're not following the guidelines:
> Resist complaining about being downmodded. It never does any good, and it makes boring reading.
> Please don't bait other users by inviting them to downmod you.
Judging from your timing, you've been waiting until I actually get a negative score to voice this opinion. News: I generally get lots of upvotes. It's generally beneficial to ask why in the context of each comment.
Resist complaining about being downmodded.
Amazing how differently the prediction of downmodding is received depending on the popularity of the position below it.
I started on HN in the days when people were actually discouraged from downmodding people they disagreed with. I also remember when pointing out when people were wrong or when something didn't seem to make sense was simply pointing something out, not "arrogance." Aside from my (entirely accurate) prediction of karma loss, please give specific excerpts and explain your perceptions of "tone" in this thread. I maintain that you are emotionally swayed by your dislike of my position.