Manuals with a gender perspective
From Gender and Tech Resources
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This HowTo focuses on one hand in listing criteria we should take into account when drafting manuals about privacy and digital security from a gender perspective. On the other hand it aims at listing collectives and organisations working on the production of manuals and to list available ones.
- Before producing a new manual some questions you should ask yourself
- Don't reinvent the wheelǃ Are you duplicating upstream work?
- If a similar manual is already availableː Who's behind it? Is it a long-term project or a one shot one? Can you continue or complement their work?
- Who's the public & what are the objectives ? What are their security & technical levels?
- Will your manual will be more about tools and how to configure those, or will it be more about threat modeling and/or behavioral processes?
- How will you maintain it? This encompass questions about frequency of updates needs depending of the tools and processes you will detail, and about processes you will run to engage your community in updating contents with you.
- How will you get feedback and peer review from readers? Will you be able to include all the feed back? (Some criteria will deal withː correctness, completeness, up to date). Remember to always indicate the last date the manual has been updated/released.
- How will you achieve or not translation & translatability of your manual? Which type of platforms will you use for achieving the translation? Will you achieve also cultural translation for instance?
- Will you provide further support to the readers such as a contact mail or a hotline?
- How will you ensure that contents are ethical, inclusive and trans-queer-feminist "approved" ?
- Numbered list item
- List of collective sand organisations achieving privacy and security manuals with a gender perspective
* Tactical technology collective - "Zen and the art of making tech work for you"
Linkː https://gendersec.tacticaltech.org/wiki/index.php/Complete_manual
Tactical Technology Collective (in the framework of its one year project “Securing Online and Offline Freedoms for Women: Expression, Privacy and Digital Inclusion”) has released in September 2015 a manual tackling some privacy and security issues from a gender perspective. It is the result of a collaborative effort that has involved our growing community of women and trans* activists, human rights defenders and technologists. The manual was created in response to our community’s requests for ideas and guidance on topics they needed, but couldn’t find elsewhere and has been written and reviewed by over 20 women coming from 19 different countries. The current content focuses on two overlapping issues: First, how can we craft appropriate online presences (or a series of them) that strengthen our ability to communicate and work online safely?; Secondly, how can we collaboratively create safe online and offline spaces that enable our communities to share, collaborate, and communicate safely?
The manual grew out of the 2014 Gender and Technology Institute, organised by Tactical Technology Collective and the Association for Progressive Communications (APC). Until next January 2016, we hope to achieve a better understanding of the readers audience, their background and needs and also to gather through this extended community more feed back about the manual in order to get a better grasp of the dimensions that are missing and which are the other tools, processes, readings and cases studies that should be added. We hope to have it translated, edited and printed in 2016.
* FemTechNet - "Addressing anti-feminist violence online"
This project is housed at the Arizona State University and is being currenlty developped by the network of feminist academics FemTechNet ( and http://dmlcompetition.net/proposals/addressing-anti-feminist-violence-online/ funded by us money macArthur foundation, to support women that experiences harassment online to respond, resource and how to, developed by femtechnet, full lifecycle mandate (from elementry school to end of life) and us based... working with international partners in order to surveil what exists + diustributed open online courses (DOOC), can be used by unversities or self oriented learners + education training + video tutorials + video dialogues + content aggregator of existimg resources ... multimodal digital book (scalar platform: http://scalar.usc.edu/works/) that enable commenting and new content creation allow for response to new threats emerging. Creative commons open access.
EFF self defense guide / relaunch in november 2014 with a specific grant / strating guide to assess your need / playlists with curated tools for specific groups people (students, LGTBQ, etc), tutorials and spefici guides on topics. Translated into 9 languages. Changes to content are suggested by people of the team maitaining, playlist for librarians are based on work on the ground with specific communitues . Licensing: Creative Commons Attribution License,
take back the tech / version 2.0 APC (association for progressive communications) first aid being updated / they have a gender look and develop answers to specific threats problems (cyberstalking, blackmailing, revenge porn), some versions spanish through a partnership, manuals are user friendly, other coming for afroamerican women, strategic use of the internet, feminist tech exchange, educational resources are variable, very specifi, updatedeness, translations, topics focused / working with level up : developing methodologies ... can be shared but not publicly available but does not have a specific gender focus. TBTT - road maps for cyber stalking: https://www.takebackthetech.net/know-more https://www.level-up.cc/ License: CC or copyleft
+ feminist principles of the internet: work with women organisations to take up the internet as a public space, and engage with conversations about governance + training modules that will be online in next weeks /notes, hands outs, exercises + a milar one on VAW with cases studies + one on internet rights and sexual rights + there is an anual meeting once a eyar to rework on feminist principles internet ... test twice in 2 places with community and target users
CommunityRed / use existing resources ADAPT (http://www.communityred.org/#adapt-game) game to teach threat modeling to make decision skills , prototype phase, exist in english, ideally could be trabslated but will need adaptation to communities / study on what causes adoption of security skills, including behavior change , better ideas and pedagogy approach + organisational security audit model (not available for comercial uses, see TechHUG)
Chayn.org open tech project in developping toolkits for women empowerment online and offline, how can somebody track you and you can react, for survivors, we work with them and we wirte them with them, advice from experts. It is volunteer base, there is no funding, will be launch next months. CC BY
Online abuse prevention initiative / guide about social media and what is online harassment /
NEEDS
Money / eff has expertise on getting money, technologists who can answer technical questions, and experienced trainers and is excited to support other people's projects!!
femtechnet has academia need to brigde spaces outside the academia but they have time and can help to build advocacy / resources
chayn needs reviewers + linking accross platforms
hamara internet no money for producing resources but use available materials of TTC and take back the tech and EFF translate
TTC need case studies and reviewers
needs need to be express in a timely fashion
community practices / you can not develop security alone, we need a meeting to work on the com of practices and assess failures/successes
Contact mails:
alexandra@tacticaltech.org shauna@communityred.org Jacqueline Wernimont (Addressing Antifeminist Violence) jwernimo@asu.edu nadia@eff.org nighat@digitalrightsfoundation.pk nadine@apcwomen.org hera@chayn.co lnakamur@umich.edu
Follow ups tactical tech wiki (we will get log ins): gendersec wiki communityred are developping a tool enbaling exchnage communities
Gap knowledge:
material in mandarin mesh networks? law enforcement guide Need law enforcement guide in Pakistani (and other!) contexts Training programs esepcially for women trainers - 100 women trainers
resources we can share with each other case studies cultural translation language translation technical translation platform (NAF) / space for discussing with USG officials reviewing each other's manuals giving activist perspective to academia
http://anarchaserver.org/mediawiki/index.php/Seguridad_digital/Digital_Security https://ssd.eff.org/ chayn.co/how-to-build-your-own-case/ chayn.co/staying-safe/ http://www.crashoverridenetwork.com/ http://paranoidsbible.tumblr.com/post/114108745259/opt-out-master-list