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Hacking into Hacking: Gender and the Hacker Phenomenon
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Volume 33 ,  Issue 4  (December 2003) table of contents
Page: 3  
Year of Publication: 2003
ISSN:0095-2737
Author
A. E. Adam  Information Systems Research Centre, University of Salford, Salford M5 4WT
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Women hackers, and whether there are any, has proved to be an endlessly fascinating topic. This paper explores the gender dimensions of hacking in terms of the male domination of hacking, the presence or absence of women hackers, the influence of the frontier metaphor and especially frontier masculinity." Central tenets of the 'hacker ethic' are examined including whether hacker communities are more egalitarian than other communities, the equal opportunities, freedom of information and work ethics of the hacker ethic. Whilst these are all problematic in gender terms there are hints that a female version of the hacker ethic is emerging amongst women hackers which is more explicitly political in motivation.