I've been to two
O'Reilly Conferences
this year and both times I've been struck by the homogeneity of the
audience. Most of the speakers and attendees are white males in their
mid-twenties to mid-thirties. There are few blacks, women, indians
or east asians. Much fewer than I'm used to seeing during my typical
workday or at other conferences I have attended. Shelley Powers has
mentioned this before in posts such as
Maids, Mommies, and Mistresses
but today was the first time I've seen this commented on by one of the
folks I'd consider to be in the 'inner circle' of the O'Reilly
Conference set.
In his post What it's like at Web 2.0 Anil Dash writes
So, there's the Old Boy's Club. And surprisingly, there's a 50-50 ratio of
wanna-bes to real successes within that club. But the unsurprising part is
probably what the makeup of that club looks like. Web 2.0 might be made of
people, as Ross Mayfield said, but judging by the conference, Web 2.0 is pretty
much made of white people. I'm not used to any event in a cosmopolitan area
being such a monoculture.
Now, the folks who organized Web 2.0 are good people whom I genuinely believe
want their event to be inclusive. But the homogeneity of the audience doesn't
just extend to ethnicity, it's even more evident in the gender breakdown. There
are others who've covered this
topic better than me, but it's jarring to me not merely because the mix was
such a poor representation of the web that I know, but because I think it's
going to come back and bite the web in the ass if it doesn't change
eventually.
See, it's not just making sure the audience and speakers represent the web
we're trying to reach, but the fact that Bay Area tech conferences are so
culturally homogenous is dangerous for the web industry. When people
talk about buying a song on the iTunes music store, they're still using some
tired Britney Spears example, or if they're under 35 or so, they might mention
Franz Ferdinand. This is not an audience in touch with Bow Wow or Gretchen
Wilson, even though they've sold millions of trackcs. When they talk about
television, they're talking about broadcasting Lost or Desperate Housewives, but
they're not aware of Degrassi or Ultimate Fighting. Worse, I met a number of
people who were comfortable with being culturally illiterate about a great many
people who live right here in the U.S.; I can't imagine
how they would reach out to other cultures or countries.
I've been quite surprised by how much O'Reilly conferences fail to
reflect the diversity of the software industry as I've experienced it,
let alone the Web at large. This is "Web 2.0"? I surely hope not.