Yes it was me. I only did this on some very recent posts as part of improvements. Only in the last 5 days or so.
I did read the post and made, in most cases, significant improvements to the posts. I wanted to learn what the spread and usage of the term was and whether the usage was extensive or problematical.
In most cases the term Guys seemed to used as an unnecessary word, a filler. Many posts started with:
Hi Guys
Or Just
Guys
and ended with
Hope you Guys can help, thanks Guys
I used it (initially) to identify those that I could improve. I did read them all, improve language, code layout, and generally clarify where I could. In many cases it was a very good indicator of some very poorly worded posts.
When you look at it more holistically, I was seeing what looked like a Mens Association or a Boys club. In international usage of English the term might not always be so innocent as it appears in some local (your locality) usage of the term. It seemed to me that some people were saying "I wish to thank only the men for reading my question", or "Only males should answer this question". If you read it that way it does become more offensive. If you substitute another descriptor for a subset of the population it illustrates the issue more clearly. Other group names would not be acceptable in everyday speech anywhere.
When it is talking about an individual it is also unnecessary as the gender of the author is also irrelevant to the answer. Some people were going further and genderising and anthropomophising programs and classes in programs. Talking about "that little guy" when referring to an object and so on. A company or vendor became "some guys" and so on.
I'm concerned about equal opportunities in the technologies industries and in recruitment. There is not enough widening participation in recruitment and language can be a barrier. I was therefore sensitised to that issue. If we look back to videos of computer technology of the past some of what you can see is shocking to the modern eye.
Whatever you felt you saw, I did not change everyone I saw. I thought about what would be an improvement in wording. Yes, in a few of cases I did change the one word. I did it particularly when I thought it was introducing unnecessary information into an otherwise good piece of prose.
When looking at an individual edit it may seem simple. In this instance the one word change makes little difference. I was looking at the term in a wider context across a larger number of posts and the patterns of usage were becoming clearer.
There are about 140,000 occurrences of that word so I'm not going to do them all. I just thought a for a few days we could be less of a frat house.
But then some people like their frat house, not everyone will agree with language usage and language evolution, in the same way that not everyone lays out their code in the same way, or not everyone uses Emacs, not everyone liked the rainbow logo.
I did want to discuss it here in meta, but I had hoped to discuss the language issue in English.SE first to see what the distribution of meaning was on a global basis and report back here once I had a feel for its usage on SO as compared to the sensitivity to the term in different cultures.
However, if the term was used in a professional context in this locality, it would very definitely be considered as unprofessional as other epithets. In your locality it may not be, but do we not aspire to be a global resource?
If trying to improve is something that offends I am happy to apologise, however I am trying to be much more thoughtful and considerate than you have surmised.
rejected by principle
.