Most members of Gamergate, the alt-right movement best known for harassing women in the game industry, operate under a veil of anonymity.

Walking is great, I guess.

With major films costing hundreds of millions of dollars to make, Hollywood is an industry that tends to repeat patterns when they make money.

Any reasonable person can look at video games and see that we don't represent women well.

For a hate group originally focused on video games, anger over a comedy movie for starring women might seem ridiculous. But at its core, Gamergate is about a toxic male sense of ownership over geek culture.

If you're fortunate enough not to know, Gamergate is the misogynist hate group of the video game world.

Software increasingly defines the world around us.

My capacity to feel fear has worn out, as if it's a muscle that can do no more.

Facebook, Apple, Tinder, Snapchat, and Google create our social realities - how we make friends, how we get jobs, and how mankind interacts. And the truth is, women don't truly have a seat at the table.

Sometimes I speak out on women in tech issues.

If you don't know what Gamergate is, my God, do I envy you.

I am a software engineer, a popular public speaker, and an expert in the Unreal engine.

Ordinarily, I develop videogames with female characters that aren't girlfriends, bimbos and sidekicks.

The BBC called me 'defiant' in a caption. I plan to frame and put it on my wall.

It's sad when 'Grand Theft Auto' has more consequences for criminal behavior than real life.

Prosecuting Gamergate is not about justice for me or the women of Giant Spacekat. It's about introducing consequences into the equation for men that treat harassing women like a game.

Gamergate has grown into a hate group that threatens the stability of the $60 billion a year game industry.

Justice for all does not apply when women use the Internet.

The truth is, you cannot run a political campaign like a tech startup. Technology is a field that fetishizes disruption. The old ways are suspect, and we place an almost irrational trust on new tools. That's fine for developing games, but it was a failing playbook for politics.

Before I ran for office, I ran a game studio.

There's a common personality type to software developers - one I certainly fall into. We're more comfortable staring at a screen than staring into someone's eyes. Engineers can be brilliant in the workplace, and something less-than-brilliant everywhere else.

There's a common misconception about running for office. People think it's dreadful, morally compromising work. But I've found the opposite is true. It made a better person and a better feminist. It forced me to take a hard look at my shortcomings.

We need to introduce civil liability for companies that ship products with reckless security vulnerabilities.

We need to invest in telecommunication infrastructure with redundancies to combat denial of service attacks.