A tad sensationalistic. From the study...
Of the sample, 126,701 (74.62%) respondents are male, while 42,191 (24.85%) are female. Readership is 63.11% male compared to 30.52% female. Extrapolated to a total population, we can suggest that males are more likely to read Wikipedia than females in the first place. There could be many reasons why, but they are not explored.
It gets trickier here, but the proportion of relative contribution, 12.64% female as opposed to the 86.73% male, does not reflect the willingness of females to contribute, since it has been skewed by the unequal sample sizes in the first place.
Here is a more relevant form of the data: 36.89% of the male sample contribute, 16.15% of the female sample contribute. Men still contribute more than women, but the willingness to contribute is not as grossly misrepresented as the articles would have you believe.
Of those who have not considered contributing, the important reasons are (they are not mutually exclusive): 23.06% do not know how, 23.68% are uncomfortable with editing others' work, 23.15% are uncomfortable with being corrected, and only 6.15% thought it to be a waste of time since edits would be overwritten. 3.58% said "other" and 3.82% said they did not know.
I do not know the specific percentages when responses are separated by gender, but it would certainly be more telling than the various assumptions within the articles.
To address one of the author's points, Niko Bellic has a larger page because the average 18 to 30 year old that contributes to Wikipedia is probably part of the population of millions of people that played that game, as opposed to the few handfuls of thousands that give a fuck about Pat Barker.
And really, if women were so uncomfortable with the heated argumentative atmosphere of the Wiki community, I would doubt they find much contention in "feminine" articles about friendship bracelets, shitty dramas, and fashion. I cannot really fathom both of these supposed reasons coexisting.
Finally, I disagree with the notion that truth is a democracy: if it was, we would all be learning about Creationism in high schools.
EDIT: Clarity.
Of the sample, 126,701 (74.62%) respondents are male, while 42,191 (24.85%) are female. Readership is 63.11% male compared to 30.52% female. Extrapolated to a total population, we can suggest that males are more likely to read Wikipedia than females in the first place. There could be many reasons why, but they are not explored.
It gets trickier here, but the proportion of relative contribution, 12.64% female as opposed to the 86.73% male, does not reflect the willingness of females to contribute, since it has been skewed by the unequal sample sizes in the first place.
Here is a more relevant form of the data: 36.89% of the male sample contribute, 16.15% of the female sample contribute. Men still contribute more than women, but the willingness to contribute is not as grossly misrepresented as the articles would have you believe.
Of those who have not considered contributing, the important reasons are (they are not mutually exclusive): 23.06% do not know how, 23.68% are uncomfortable with editing others' work, 23.15% are uncomfortable with being corrected, and only 6.15% thought it to be a waste of time since edits would be overwritten. 3.58% said "other" and 3.82% said they did not know.
I do not know the specific percentages when responses are separated by gender, but it would certainly be more telling than the various assumptions within the articles.
To address one of the author's points, Niko Bellic has a larger page because the average 18 to 30 year old that contributes to Wikipedia is probably part of the population of millions of people that played that game, as opposed to the few handfuls of thousands that give a fuck about Pat Barker.
And really, if women were so uncomfortable with the heated argumentative atmosphere of the Wiki community, I would doubt they find much contention in "feminine" articles about friendship bracelets, shitty dramas, and fashion. I cannot really fathom both of these supposed reasons coexisting.
Finally, I disagree with the notion that truth is a democracy: if it was, we would all be learning about Creationism in high schools.
EDIT: Clarity.