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Passionate Voices Episode 1: Sumana Harihareswara

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    ♫ dubstep music playing ♫
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    This was in the pale dublight
    by Sumana Harihareswara.
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    Welcome to Passionate Voices,
    welcome Sumana!
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    Hi there, Erik!
    How's it going today?
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    Good, how are you?
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    I'm good! It's good to see you!
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    Good to see you too!
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    So, for our viewers,
    a quick summary:
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    Sumana is a technology manager,
    a writer, a coder, a community organizer.
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    Born in New Jersey, moved
    through Pennsylvania, Missouri,
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    northern California, before coming to
    New York, and also has been involved
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    in open source for a long time.
    Sumana, what is your passion?
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    I would say I have two main passions.
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    One of them is making people laugh.
    Through stand-up comedy, through
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    extremely silly web apps, my writing
    and things like that.
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    The fanvid that you just saw, for
    instance.
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    But the other passion, the one that I
    spend more time, and certainly have been
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    spending a lot of my career on, is, I
    really care a lot about empowering people,
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    especially marginalized and especially
    underprivileged peope, using technology.
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    And sometimes that means
    working on technology that does that
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    empowering, such as MediaWiki,
    the software behind Wikipedia.
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    Sometimes it means teaching people
    how to be better users of technology
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    through making or leading trainings and
    tutoring people, mentoring people, and so on.
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    And sometimes it means helping get
    lots of different diverse people into
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    the world of making technology,
    so we can all empower ourselves.
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    So, for instance I've been involved in
    a lot of diversity efforts on different
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    scales and at different parts of the
    "pipeline", involved in getting diverse
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    people of diverse demographics, talents,
    abilities and backgrounds into open
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    source software. So we can all make
    this software together, that we're all
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    using to improve our own lives.
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    - So, Sumana, how did you get involved
    in open source in the first place?
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    - My origin story is a guy named Seth
    Schoen.
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    Seth Schoen is a technologist, currently
    at the Electronic Freedom .. Frontier
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    Foundation. Sorry. Like everybody else,
    I accidentally say freedom when I should
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    say Frontier. But, back in 1998, when we
    met, we were both undergraduates at
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    the University of California at Berkeley.
    And I was hanging out with nerds.
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    These were the kinds of geeks who
    made fun of me because I referred
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    to individual "Star Trek: The Next
    Generation" episodes by title instead
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    of stardate. So, clearly that made me a
    humanities person. [laughs]
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    And I, through one of them, met this guy,
    who was introduced to me partly as:
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    "He's such a free software zealot, he
    won't use Windows at all."
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    And that was Seth Schoen.
    And Seth introduced me to the
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    side of open source and free software
    that's about empowering ourselves
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    and everybody, by making sure
    that everybody has control over the
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    software that we use and that in some
    sense controls us.
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    The connection between that and all these
    other values that I care a lot about,
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    like everbody having a say, everybody
    having a fair chance.
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    And he introduced me, for instance, to
    Slashdot, which at the time was sort of
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    the open source New York Times.
    And which incidentally is, through
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    a serious of links, the way that I met
    Leonard Richardson, who is now my
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    husband, actually, and who has been
    sort of my partner in a lot of these
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    endeavors for the past decade plus.
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    Seth was a fantastic mentor and guide.
    He was the kind of guy, and still is
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    absolutely the kind of guy, where,
    you ask him a question because you
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    don't have enough information. And it
    would never even cross his mind to think
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    of ridiculing you, or using this as an
    opportunity for a dominance display.
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    He always thought really deeply about,
    "Hold on, what do you need to understand
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    here that you didn't understand, that
    caused you to ask that question",
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    and then he would help you build your
    mental model.
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    And he was such a gentle teacher to me
    exactly when I needed it.
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    And so to me that's what open source is.
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    He was my role model, not just in terms
    of trying to live values like freedom,
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    and free speech, and empowering each
    other.
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    And it was very soon after that
    I switched to Linux, in the late 90s,
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    which meant that I had to deal with hand
    configuring PPP and all the rest of it.
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    But also, he was my guide and my role
    model in seeing what this world is and
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    ought to be, in terms of all of us
    sharing and teaching each other.
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    And I recently talked to someone else who
    said that his role model in getting into
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    open source had been Linus Torvalds.
    So he had learned to take people down.
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    He had learned that the way to build
    yourself is by shouting and others
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    and being quite rude and snarky to them,
    because then there will be people who
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    applaud you for that clever snarkiness.
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    And I'm very, very grateful that in 1998,
    that's not who I ran into.
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    - And where do you think that comes from,
    that snarkiness that you sometimes find in
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    open source communities? Do you have a
    theory around, like, how these behaviors
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    develop and why people exhibit them?
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    - I find that basically all the human
    communities that I've ever been
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    a part of include some elements of
    people being competitive, and of people
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    being nurturing and collaborative.
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    I think if I look in open source,
    I can find both of those things.
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    If I look in the community of people
    who read and write romance novels --
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    I've recently started reading romance --
    then I would also find that.
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    If you look in sports, I mean, you'll find
    that anywhere.
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    And I think that the Linux kernel
    community bears very strongly the stamp
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    of the person who founded it, and who
    by norm -- conversations are normative.
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    Part of how we know what is okay to say,
    is we look at what other people are
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    saying, right? And we look at what people
    get praise or punishment for doing.
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    And I think that's part of what people
    see.
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    I think there's also, of course, as I say,
    pockets and corners, right?
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    You look at the Python community and
    you look at how Guido van Rossum has
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    acted in his capacity as a leader for
    many, many years.
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    And overall you're going to see, there
    is some snark, there is humor.
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    You watch his keynote from PyCon this
    year, PyCon North America in Montreal
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    that just happended last month. And you
    hear laughter, but it's gentle laughter,
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    and it's often self-deprecating laughter.
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    He talked, he spent a tremendous amount
    of his keynote talking about the reasons
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    on a genuine, legitimate, understandable
    psychological level, and sort of a
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    lifecycle level, why projects go
    unmaintained and fall into disrepair.
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    And so he approached that question not
    from, "Okay, now we need to punish those
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    people and I'm gonna make fun of those
    people" kind of a perspective.
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    But he said, "This is going to happen,
    this is a natural part of life.
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    Let us engage in useful conversation,
    so those tasks can then get taken up by
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    the next generation." Which seems to me
    to be a much healthier approach.
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    And so I think there's some amount of
    top-down leadership and role models and
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    what not. I think there's also some element
    of, it is a simple fact that text online, because
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    it doesn't bear with it things like body
    language and oral tone, it is easy for us
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    as risk-averse creatures, as insecure
    people, to read even neutral words as
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    hostile. I ran into this many times myself
    as a community manager.
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    People who do code review know it.
    People who are trying to give written
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    criticism even to people in a peer writing
    group or something like that know it.
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    And we added emoticons to our lives partly
    in order to help compensate for this.
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    And I think in that environment, sometimes
    it's easy to just go with it.
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    To go with that current, and to go with
    that flow.
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    And say, well, if it's going to be read as
    hostile anyway -- perhaps this even
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    happens on a subconscious level --
    then I may as well hone that.
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    And there are a lot of people --
    I'm actually a little bit jealous
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    of the people who decided from a young
    age on the Internet that they would try
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    playing around with being known through
    different identities, and hide behind
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    pseudonyms, and hone their flaming skills
    and stuff like that.
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    Because it is a genuinely valuable skill
    to be able to be rude to somebody
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    else on the Internet in such a way that
    other people will applaud you and back
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    you up. I do not have that skill. And one
    reason why I don't have that skill is
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    because I never practiced it. Because from
    a very young age I decided, everything
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    that I said on the public Internet, I was
    going to sign my entire name to.
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    And from a very young age I knew that
    was going to be an unusual and unique
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    calling card, and I would not be hide,
    I would never be able to say,
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    "It was that other Sumana Harihareswara
    who said those terrible things." [laughs]
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    So I ddn't learn that skill.
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    And that's one reason why there are
    kinds of leadership, that no one calls
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    leadership, generally, that I am not
    going to be able to do.
Title:
Passionate Voices Episode 1: Sumana Harihareswara
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Video Language:
English

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