| Founder(s) | Valerie Aurora Mary Gardiner |
|---|---|
| Type | 501(c)(3) |
| Founded | 2011 |
| Location | United States |
| Focus | Women's rights, FOSS, free-software community |
| Motto | "Supporting women in open technology and culture." |
| Website | Official website |
The Ada Initiative is a non-profit organization that seeks to increase women's participation in the free culture movement, open source technology and open culture. The organization was founded in 2011 by Linux kernel developer and open source advocate Valerie Aurora and open source developer and advocate Mary Gardiner (the founder of AussieChix, the largest organization for women in open source in Australia[1]). It is named for Ada Lovelace, the "world's first computer programmer," in honor of whom the Ada programming language is named.
|
Contents
|
Valerie Aurora, already an activist for women in open source, joined Mary Gardiner and members of Geek Feminism to develop anti-harassment policies for conferences[2][3] after Noirin Shirley was sexually assaulted at ApacheCon 2010.[2] Aurora quit her job as a Linux kernel developer at Red Hat and, with Gardiner, founded the Ada Initiative in February of 2011.[4] The organization is named after Ada Lovelace, who worked with Charles Babbage and is called the world's first computer programmer.[2]
All services provided by the Ada Initiative are pro bono, and the organization is supported by member donations. In the summer of 2011, the Ada Initiative launched a seed funding campaign to raise start-up funds with a goal of contributions from 100 funders.[3] The campaign wrapped up six days before its planned deadline.[5] The organization's first major sponsor was Linux Australia,[2] who provided support alongside Puppet Labs, DreamHost, The Mail Archive and Google.[6] Aurora and Gardiner are the only staff members, serving full-time roles in the organization.[3]
The Ada Initiative is governed by a six-person board of directors, who oversee its management. The current board includes both Aurora and Gardiner, Rachel Chalmers of The 451 Group, Denise Paolucci of Dreamwidth Studios, Sue Gardner of the Wikimedia Foundation, and Matt Zimmerman of Singly.[1] An advisory board of 19 members provides input about ideas and projects.[7]
The Ada Initiative is a non-profit organization dedicated to increasing participation of women in open technology and culture, which includes open source software, Wikipedia and other open data, and open social media.[5]
One of the Ada Initiative's first programs was developing anti-harassment policies for conferences. The Ada Initiative works with open source conference organizers to create and communicate policies to make conferences safer and more inviting for all attendees, particularly women. Conferences such as Ubuntu Developer Summits and all Linux Foundation events, including LinuxCon, have adopted policies based on the Ada Initiative's work.[3]
The Ada Initiative is developing policy framework for creating a Women in Open Source Scholarship and programming guides for outreach projects and events. The organization also hosts workshops and training. These workshops and programs consist of Allies Workshops for male and institutional supporters and "First Patch Week" programs, which encourages women's participation in FOSS through mentoring. The workshop framework is freely available,[8] although the Ada Initiative also offers facilitators to conduct the workshops in person.[9]
By encouraging women's participation in open source culture, the Ada Initiative encourages women to engage in open source professionally and full-time, not just as volunteers. The organization also researches women's roles and experiences in open source, focusing on bringing research up to date; the last survey done of the gender balance in open source was completed in 2006.[10] Research methodology and a new survey were produced in 2011.[11] A repeat of the survey will take place at the end of two years, with hopes to provide a standard resource for the industry.[2] The initial survey invited participants of any gender and inquired about subjects regarding open source and free software, hardware, open mapping, and other related open source areas, as well as free culture such as Creative Commons, online activism, mashup, maker, hacker spaces and related communities.[11]
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)