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“Plug and socket”, industry group pushes for "obvious" change in terminology

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19 points by noutella 4 years ago · 82 comments

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MatthiasWandel 4 years ago

Plug/socket terminology is not necessarily the same as male/female terminology. The socket can be male, if it is the one with the metal pins. The power connector on the back of a PC is a good example. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_of_connectors_and_faste...

Of course, people aren't necessarily using the terminology completely correctly as it is.

And then there's the connectors on fancy RF equipment that can assume either role!

  • OJFord 4 years ago

    This is totally off-topic, I'm just startled (I don't know why, esp. knowing you worked at RIM) to see your username here! I recently discovered your channel & site (via Marius Hornberger's) and have had hours of entertainment 'binge-watching' through the entire back catalogue (nearly finished, sadly) - very many thanks.

    To anyone else - wholeheartedly recommend woodgears.ca & https://www.youtube.com/c/Matthiaswandel/videos. The former's been discussed a few times too: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu.... (But again, because it's of general HN-type engineering-y interest - not all 'just' woodworking - not because it has any relevance to this particular submission.)

  • dvfjsdhgfv 4 years ago

    I believe the title of this Wikipedia article is wrong. When we started replacing the word "sex" with "gender" a few years ago, we were careful to differentiate both uses. But a few years later some people started to feel like "gender" is the new politically-correct word for "sex". It is not: these two have very distinct uses, and using "gender" for connectors is ridiculous because - as far as we can tell - they have no social identity (yet!).

  • JoBrad 4 years ago

    I was informally taught that a plug goes into a socket. Cables and adapters commonly have the same connector on each end, making the plug/socket terminology even less descriptive of the connecting formats.

  • timw4mail 4 years ago

    Inny and Outy?

emsign 4 years ago

Sex isn't ewwww. It's a natural and everyday thing. I could ask the same question: What is wrong with you?

  • 0-_-0 4 years ago

    That's a good point. As an exercise for the reader, let's try to write an outrage article from the opposing viewpoint:

    One of the shining examples of body shaming and societal opression of sexual expression is the recent push of changing the naming of audio plugs as "male" and "female", calling this naming "gross" and "problematic", as if genitalia was something to be ashamed of instead of treating it as a natural an everyday thing.

    OK I'm not very good at this, I'm sure someone from the Guardian could do a much better job.

  • raxxorrax 4 years ago

    Let's be honest. Sex is plenty ewww for US Americans that mostly are heading these language changes. It also feels like catholicism 2.0.

  • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

    I believe that question is also offensive to someone, somewhere, hence not allowed.

  • senortumnus 4 years ago

    Puritanism is back, baby!

  • Cthulhu_ 4 years ago

    It's not though, it's generally reserved for the bedroom and private spaces.

    • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

      Performing it is. Talking about it is not. At least not when I was a kid, unless you were from some really socially conservative family.

squiggleblaz 4 years ago

Oh please do. With something like an audio cable at least there's one end that is purely sticking out and one end that is purely sticking in. But with a lot of other cables there's a mix of inny bits and outy bits and it took me a long time to work out which bit I'm supposed to pay attention to to make the analogy work (the answer is to pay attention to any visible bits that carry a single/power. If this is obvious to you I suspect it was just because of how someone explained it to you, but if you're just brillianter than me then great!).

  • mcphage 4 years ago

    > But with a lot of other cables there's a mix of inny bits and outy bits

    If there's a mixture, is plug & socket any clearer?

liaukovv 4 years ago

Such proposals usually start with "self-evident" assertion of harm incorrect terminology causes, but is it actually measurable? Did anyone make research while isolating influence of such things? Sociology is such a shitshow

  • raxxorrax 4 years ago

    > but is it actually measurable?

    Of course not. Although this isn't sociology and shouldn't be blamed on the field. Yes, they have these guys, but it is a minority. It is just a silly group of industry partners.

  • anoncake 4 years ago

    If this terminology actually causes harm we should see trans people and groups propose such a change, not an industry group looking for a PR opportunity.

    • Cthulhu_ 4 years ago

      You're saying it should be reactionary, that someone should get angry first. You're also making assumptions about the people pushing for this. Why not pre-empt it and save everyone a lot of headaches? You don't need to be a victim or to be offended to realize a problem and work on a fix. I mean I'm not affected or offended by your comment, yet here I am.

      • raxxorrax 4 years ago

        I do make assumptions about people pushing this at this point. I don't realize the problem and nobody can explain it. I see this as PR and people falling for it that wait for empty promises about something.

      • anoncake 4 years ago

        You actually do, in this case. If using the terms "male" and "female" causes harm, the harm it causes is psychological. You can't really realize it from the outside. There is nothing to pre-empt here: These terms are already used to either they already cause harm or they won't start doing so. Which means there is no reason to effectively guess if they cause harm since you can actually ask someone who you think may be harmed. Solving a problem that doesn't actually exist is just a waste of time and resources. Moreover, it gives people the impression that "wokeness" in general is just pointless virtue signalling.

    • wiredfool 4 years ago

      I've had individuals in affected groups ask me why I was using particular words as far as 30 years back. (in that case, it was IDE).

      It's not really my place to be asserting that it's not offensive or causing harm, when it costs very little to be less offensive and more precise.

      • salawat 4 years ago

        You're not calculating cost correctly. Think of it from an information theoretic point of view. You exist in a network that has already converged to a dominant representation. It's essentially a nigh universally understood application of those terms in a technical context. Even more than an API, it could be considered a part of socio-technical ABI or calling convention.

        Imagine if you will a world in which every individual starts changing what they call things on a whim every day. You run into a Tower of Babel problem, and one that at best, stabilizes to a dynamic equilibrium i.e., the problem never stops, it just changes from thing to thing. Symbol changes have cost. That cost quickly amplifies in terms of required reconciliation and update of protocol across the entire human network. That means across languages, cultures, education systems, etc.

        What you'll find, is this seriously grates against a bunch of people way more interested in getting work done and being understood without being on receiving end of This Week's Polemic at the same time.

        This may sound callous or cold, but there is a reason society does not wholesale rewrite foundational communication structures/cultures/techné/art/etc... on a whim, and when it does happen, it's not just because a small group gets a marginal bump, but the change warrants such a bump in overall benefit or actualizable horizons of possibility, that it becomes worth the chaos of adapting to the change and shepherding it along.

        Every individual may think they only have to pay or exact a one time cost but that quickly compounds.Think of all the times you end up saying "You know what I mean?" and the recipient goes on to demonstrate they do. This is one of those cases where one can only really justify change having a trivial cost in the presence of ascribing a value modifier of 0 or less to tradition, instead of actually accounting for all the instances of questions that don't need to be asked, because there is an instinctual, endemic response. While one or another person looking at themselves in isolation may see the cost as trivial to enact in their local sphere of influence, it exacts a non trivial cost in the overall context of human to human communication over time.

        Note, I'm not saying no one should try to change these types of things. To do so, or try to is the essence of politics; I'm merely pointing out that the only way you see no cost is if you did count a whole lot of other implicit dependencies elsewhere as not significant.

        You do you, but reality has a way of making it hurt when people do that.

      • anoncake 4 years ago

        That's what I wrote. But the Professional Audio Manufacturers Alliance does not represent an affected group.

    • pyr0hu 4 years ago

      absolutely agree. this feels like someone wants to do "something" but does actually nothing. this won't help or stop the abuse/hate/discrimination against women or trans (please dont hate me if i let someone out :()

      purely a PR move.

    • shmageggy 4 years ago

      Well such groups are praising the change, so it seems they support it. From the linked article

      > “Shoutout to PAMA for introducing neutral language for the audio industry,” said Karrie Keyes, Executive Director of the women-in-audio advocacy group SoundGirls.org, as well as monitor engineer for Pearl Jam/Eddie Vedder. “This is a tremendous undertaking and is important to continue working toward meaningful changes in our industry.”

      • raxxorrax 4 years ago

        Then again, people might not really like women advocacy groups if they find out they pushed such changes.

      • anoncake 4 years ago

        That's a feminist group, not a trans group, but point taken. Though that seems to be more of a group of female prudes. Unless female connectors/plugs are considered somehow inferior to male ones in the industry?

    • dmd 4 years ago

      They have been, for decades. The response has always been "to succeed this kind of change needs to come from within the industry".

      • anoncake 4 years ago

        I believe you -- and I don't actually like the gendered terms myself -- but do you have a source for that?

  • CJefferson 4 years ago

    How could you isolate such an effect? I'm sure the problem is linked to society as a whole -- the words only make sense because people relate them to genetalia.

    People have done research by asking people what they think about such gendered terms, and people in the less represented gender (in whichever situation you are talking about) tend to dislike them.

    • liaukovv 4 years ago

      Maybe less represented gender likes this terminology less because they understand it less(because they are less represented)

      I'm just saying waving away the need for proving points before taking acion is doing more harm than good

    • cdot2 4 years ago

      Which is the less represented gender here?

      • CJefferson 4 years ago

        I'm guessing women are under-represented in the Professional Audio Manufacturers Alliance. I will admit I don't have evidence of that.

      • Cthulhu_ 4 years ago

        Does that actually matter?

  • LunaSea 4 years ago

    Nope, it's classic outrage culture and bullying tactic.

    • Cthulhu_ 4 years ago

      Who is outraged and who is bullying in this case? It looks like the industry is being proactive and is pre-empting outrage. Using gendered terminology is unnecessary anyway, to the point where it becomes childish (giggle, boy plug goes into girl socket and you get sparks)

      • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

        Male/female terminology cuts through noise and using male/female for plugs translates to probably every language immediately if you are trying to convey what plugs into what.

        I can see a possibility that it had real utility in communicating concepts across completely, different languages, where using the words socket and plug might have caused confusion and more time spent in translation.

        • senortumnus 4 years ago

          Agreed - it’s intuitive to humans, the primary users of tech

          Plug and socket: less intuitive

      • raxxorrax 4 years ago

        Using gendered terminology is probably not harmful at all. Why should it be? This terminology was understood in almost all colleagues in nearly any languages. Most were men, yes, but that isn't the reason why women are underrepresentated.

    • raxxorrax 4 years ago

      You can call plugs "famale" too:

      https://www.aliexpress.com/item/32861597805.html

      technically gender neutral... although I find the double head a bit indecent...

nanis 4 years ago

I grew up with _fiş_ and _priz_. Presumably, they are words that were borrowed in to Turkish from French. To this day, I cannot remember which is which and I do not know the original French spellings. According to Google translate, _fiş_ is "prise de courant" so what the heck is _priz_ then?

Anyway, the point is, "male" and "female" made immediate sense. "plug" and "socket" don't seem to be exact analogues. When I think of a socket, I think more of things that are more permanent things like wall sockets or sockets on actual computers etc. Is there any reason to assume that all such things will always be receptacles? When I look at this picture[1], I see a set of "female" sockets next to a "male" socket using the disfavored terminology. As English is my second language, I do not know whether I should refer to the one that is "male" as a plug.

Another aversion I have to the general tendency to changing language by decree is the fact that I experienced the linguistic impoverishment visited upon the Turkish language as a result of the 20th century effort to remove words of Arabic and Farsi origin and somehow arrive at a "pure" language. Such efforts rarely lead to where their designers want them to go.

[1]: https://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2007/08/inlet...

  • throwaddzuzxd 4 years ago

    > To this day, I cannot remember which is which and I do not know the original French spellings. According to Google translate, _fiş_ is "prise de courant" so what the heck is _priz_ then?

    _priz_ is "prise" (socket). _fiş_ is "fiche" (plug). The thing is that both can be either male or female.

    > When I think of a socket, I think more of things that are more permanent things like wall sockets or sockets on actual computers

    That's definitely the case. A "prise" is a wall socket and a "fiche" is on a wire. I believe it's the actual definition of the terms.

denton-scratch 4 years ago

Oh dear. The distinction between sex and gender again.

Back in the days of RS232, I owned a cable known as a "gender-bender". This was long before the days of Boy George. It was 8" long, and had a female DB-25 connector on each end. These things were also known as "eight-inch couplers", a term into which you could also read sexual connotations.

  • formerly_proven 4 years ago

    As an ESL person "plug and socket" only seems marginally less sexually-connotated than "male and female bits".

oxymoran 4 years ago

Is plug and socket any better? Aren’t you assigning binary signal processing roles to a spectrum? What if they want to identify simply as connectors?

  • raxxorrax 4 years ago

    I think the underlying reaons is that the association is harmful alone, especially if the association contains somthing about sex. I think that is a fundamental misunderstanding.

    I don't like people that advocate for language regulation, because they cannot even justify their positions, they just try to force it on others and wonder about the negative feedback.

    "I doesn't cost much" is often an argument, but it remains silly from start.

oxymoran 4 years ago

Why is male and female terminology bad here? Are we disputing that men have penises and women have vaginas? That doesn’t imply that you can’t have a sex change. Do trans people not generally convert their genitalia to match the destination sex?

  • MatthiasWandel 4 years ago

    Just because something is true doesn't make it something we are allowed to acknowledge as being so.

  • CJefferson 4 years ago

    I think the argument is, to understand this terminology, you have to reduce people to their sexual organs. This isn't a trans-related issue.

  • jfengel 4 years ago

    No, they don't. A few do, but the operation is expensive, painful, and not always satisfactory. Many will take hormones and some will have non-genital surgeries, but full gender confirmation surgery is for a minority.

    A great many, perhaps a majority, don't do anything to their bodies at all. They change their clothes, their pronouns, their hair, and their lifestyles, but have no surgery or medicines. They live in society as their gender, and anything that's seen only by the people they're intimate with are a subject for discussion between them.

    The result is that yes, there are a fair number of men with vaginas and women with penises. Which doesn't matter to you unless you're either their doctor or their lover, but it's important to recognize that it is in fact the case.

mg794613 4 years ago

Thew fact alone that sex is being put away as "ewwwww" shows where the real problem lies. Now master and slave was already somewhat ridiculous discussion. This discussion is really a flag waver, as there is no negative connotation with different sexes. Usually written by self acclaimed experts.

shmageggy 4 years ago

Are the scare quotes necessary? In this case, they are somewhat misleading, as it's not the industry group (Professional Audio Manufacturers Alliance) that called the changes obvious, but rather this particular article.

quirkot 4 years ago

Can confirm using "plug" for both male and female ends interchangeably

  • lallysingh 4 years ago

    The plug is part of the cable, the socket is part of the device. The geometry of the connector itself is irrelevant.

    • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

      How would one differentiate between the type of cable end that goes into this outlet?

      https://www.homedepot.com/p/Leviton-15-Amp-125-Volt-Locking-...

      • lallysingh 4 years ago

        Use a second word to identify it. A "Foo plug" or if it's just the reverse of what you normally have, an "inverted plug."

        • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

          Adding an avenue for confusion when you can tell anyone in any language that you need a wire with a female end for a male outlet seems like a less than ideal use of resources.

          • lallysingh 4 years ago

            Sounds like you're conflating connector types with which side goes on the cable. Your ontology only works for simple connectors where the gender metaphor is trivial. But it's still a metaphor, and a poor and crude one at that. You could say "pinned socket" and "holed plug" and be simpler and more direct.

            But sure, keep with the 6th grade penis joke instead.

            • lotsofpulp 4 years ago

              What is an example where the ontology does not work? It seems like a pretty accurate metaphor for all the everyday electrical/plumbing use cases I have come across. What makes it “poor and crude”?

              And viewing it as a 6th grade penis joke is more of a 6th grade penis joke mentality than just using male and female. We use allusion all the time to use words to mean different things in different contexts all the time.

    • chha 4 years ago

      And this will cause issues when you have cable-into-cable. Then you'll have a plug into a plug, with no apparent difference.

  • cdot2 4 years ago

    Which is clearly a more useable syntax

    • pyr0hu 4 years ago

      how?

      male and female clearly described which goes where. if you interchange "plug" , I won't know which cable extender or plug or cable will I buy.

lallysingh 4 years ago

Well said:

"To put it more simply – neutral language is always better for technical terminology, because it’s clearer, more accessible to more people, and includes the people who provide the talent and skills that make industries and technologies work. End of story."

OJFord 4 years ago

Next up: AI cabling suggested to be sold in multi-packs only, so that you have spares if the first identifies differently to your requirement.

Note that we already have 'couplers' that allow 'mating' female-female or male-male cable ends, so I think any argument that it's homophobic language or whatever is on thin ground. Really the only valid (if I can call it that) argument against it is the author's 'eewwww', but.. really?

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