Jump to content

Websites and social networks: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Incomplete}}
{{Incomplete}}
[[Websites and social networks]] that do or don't give [[recognition]] to [[nonbinary]] [[gender identity]] in their user forms. For nonbinary people, the most undesirable sites are those that require all users to mark their [[gender]] as either "[[female]]" or "[[male]]," with no other options. Similarly bad are sites that mark this choice as "[[sex]]" rather than "[[gender]]". Sites that are more friendly to nonbinary people are those that let users write in their own gender, give a wide variety of gender options to choose from a drop-down menu, give a third gender option such as "[[other]]", or don't ask about gender at all. Some sites also ask about a user's [[gender neutral titles|title]] or [[pronouns]], and ideally let users include more than the standard [[binary]] options for these.
[[Websites and social networks]] that do or don't give [[recognition]] to [[nonbinary]] [[gender identity]] in their user forms. For nonbinary people, the most undesirable sites are those that require all users to mark their [[gender]] as either "[[female]]" or "[[male]]," with no other options. Similarly bad are sites that mark this choice as "[[sex]]" rather than "[[gender]]". Sites that are more friendly to nonbinary people are those that let users write in their own gender, give a wide variety of gender options to choose from a drop-down menu, give a third gender option such as "[[other]]", or don't ask about gender at all. Some sites also ask about a user's [[gender neutral titles|title]] or [[pronouns]], and ideally let users include more than the standard [[binary genders|binary]] options for these.


==How to use this page==
==How to use this page==
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.