In the quest of finding "information suggesting someone is good", ignoring the known, recognized biases inherent in your sampling method seems like not such a good idea. You're throwing away data and then saying you have an absence of information.
Additionally, her statistics are not solely about women. They are about the multiple, separate groups that encounter obstacles when trying to contribute to open source projects. They include not just gender but race and health.
You're brushing away a lot of the subtlety of her argument and then misrepresenting her stance as "victory". On the contrary, she's exhorting us to work together to make our field more equitable and to recognize the deeper social realities underneath the shallow veneer of meritocracy.
Two things about your comparison:
1. There's a huge difference between contributing to Instagram/Facebook and contributing to GitHub that I'm sure I don't have to explain to you.
2. Dryden's blog post is not about "creating content and pushing it to free services". It is specifically about contributions to OSS not being inherently meritocratic.
Additionally, her statistics are not solely about women. They are about the multiple, separate groups that encounter obstacles when trying to contribute to open source projects. They include not just gender but race and health.
You're brushing away a lot of the subtlety of her argument and then misrepresenting her stance as "victory". On the contrary, she's exhorting us to work together to make our field more equitable and to recognize the deeper social realities underneath the shallow veneer of meritocracy.
Two things about your comparison:
1. There's a huge difference between contributing to Instagram/Facebook and contributing to GitHub that I'm sure I don't have to explain to you.
2. Dryden's blog post is not about "creating content and pushing it to free services". It is specifically about contributions to OSS not being inherently meritocratic.
I'm not sure why you'd conflate the two.