Note: I make assumptions that people reading this post are pretty intelligent (which most of the regulars on this forum are). I would advise against linking this post to random people on the internet.
Gamergate on the whole, while it has not directly affected me, has been a bit of an emotional drain on me as it has affected game industry friends around me. And for better or for worse I've been reading a lot about it. Misinformation has been floating around, and also just an extraordinary amount of fluff. Things do seem to be winding down now, though, so I'm collecting my thoughts.
Origins and Zoe QuinnMost likely everyone is familiar with the basic story now; Zoe Quinn, who is an indie developer, and who has been in the news even last year (when in December 2013 the internet got angry about...I actually don't know what they were angry about that time; possibly just her game). Anyway, this time, turns out she was cheating on her boyfriend. Boyfriend posts about the infidelity. And suddenly there's a mob of angry people on the internet.
So a little bit of context:
https://medium.com/@srachel_m/gamergate-launched-in-my-apartment-and-internet-im-sorry-not-that-sorry-13e5650fd172This is a woman who is friends/acquaintances with Zoe and the boyfriend. She suffered from some serious sexual harassment herself in the workplace, recognized similar emotional patterns in the boyfriend, and encouraged him to make the post.
And the general evidence on the internet points towards Zoe being...not very nice. (For the Grefters who like psychological analysis, there is literally
hours of analysis on the original chat logs).
That said, being not very nice is...not illegal, and not justification for death threats, and does not imply widespread corruption of videogame journalism.
Internet propagation and 4 chanSo...this is a Cracked article written by Zoe herself. Most of this is stuff that is well-known; harassment happened. The one interesting point to me is point #5:
http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-things-i-learned-as-internets-most-hated-person/4 chan, or sites like it, have been known to organize campaigns in the past, trying to get hashtags trending by making fake feminist twitter accounts. Zoe has been vocal about certain elements within the movement (such as #notyourshield) being planned and executed on 4 chan (complete with screenshots she took).
Meanwhile, Jennifer Allaway states that gamergate formed like a hate group, and at the time of writing, continued to operate like a hate group, detailing the recruitment tools, the way propaganda is framed to the outside world, etc.:
http://jezebel.com/gamergate-trolls-arent-ethics-crusaders-theyre-a-hate-1644984010Ethics in Video Game JournalismDespite
"actually it's about ethics in video game journalism" becoming this year's punchline...there are indeed people who care about ethics in video game journalism.
Well...two camps really. There's one camp that cares about feminism in video game journalism and wants it removed. And another group that legit cares about ethical breaches. The first camp honestly comes across as the louder camp, but doesn't really present much that I find worth discussing. The second group:
http://blueplz.blogspot.com/2014/10/whose-side-am-i-on.htmlTotalbiscuit here rambles on for quite a while, but nicely encapsulates a lot of ethical concerns in the massive third-to-last paragraph. Now, Totalbiscuit is someone I've been familiar with for several years now due to his involvement in the SC2 community; I've seen no sign of him being a misogynist; quite the opposite if anything. But what's interesting is combining this with Jennifer Allaway's research above. She describes hate groups as needing a leader to get started, and the effective leadership of gamergate passing a couple of times. So what happens when someone who is not hateful becomes a key leader of the movement? Because certainly it seemed like that was what was happening...to a certain degree. There were some people actively pushing back against Totalbiscuit, and certainly gamergate forums tended to contain plenty of "Mens Rights Activists".
Although that would be baseless speculation as of today, since within the last day, Totalbiscuit decided that it would be better to pursue the same ethical concerns without using the hashtag:
http://blueplz.blogspot.com/2014/11/i-spoke-to-david-rosen-of-wolfire-and.htmlImpact on people in the game industryThe mood has been generally negative. More women than usual have been talking about considering a new line of work. I very much like this article on tackling the issue of recruiting and retaining female talent:
http://www.gamasutra.com/blogs/LaralynMcWilliams/20141030/229072/Shes_Not_Playing_It_Wrong.phpFeminism vs other social justice causesSomething I observed a while back that I thought was odd: 12 years ago, I could post something feminist on GameFAQs and it would not be an issue. The reaction would be "Huh, you're one of those feminist people; I've heard that people like you exist." The reaction is roughly what I would expect if I were to announce on a board that I had a nose ring. "Interesting. I'd never do that myself."
Lately the reaction has been very different, and much more negative. If I post something feminist on a game forum like Reddit, I expect to get downvoted to roughly -15 or -20. By comparison, something I've noticed at least on Starcraft forums (which does contain a few popular transgender personalities) is that positive transgender stuff tends to get upvoted, and transphobic stuff tends to get downvoted. Similarly, I've notice that internet gaming forums tend to overall be very much in support of gay marriage. This is all anecdotal, of course, but general internet mood is what leads to things blowing up rather than not being a big deal on the internet.
The #notyourshield hashtag is interesting, in that it is an anti-feminist tag, but the statements made within it are often of the form of "I'm a minority other than white female, and mainstream feminists have not been representing me well." Which...naturally evolved into bringing some attention to Disability representation, and Transgender representation in games. Not exactly what I would expect out of what is undeniably a pro-gamergate anti-feminism tag. It is also noteworthy that the guy who runs 8-chan is a disabled man, and is pretty much universally liked (hell, from the one interview I heard, I liked him too; seemed like a reasonable guy).
But it does feel like some kind of bizarre universe, where people don't support things that everyone supported when I was 10 (like feminism), but do make statements on Albeism.