Deleting because answer contained incorrect details, was written after a long and tiring day, and wasn't that productive
Stack Exchange has faced a year full of communications problems.
We had the welcoming blog post. A strong statement by someone who wasn't involved in the community, nor was present on meta, or had discussed this in any way in advance, posted on a blog with no option to reply to it.
We have the design changes, where it looks like practicality and commercialization was chosen over the users wishes. Which is fine in my opinion, we don't want an unmaintainable or unprofitable and thus unsustainable platform, but it was communicated late, and we had no part in the discussion, which meant there was a lot of negativity.
We had SE increasingly not taking action on feature requests, on which this post on MSE provides a nice overview.
We had the HNQ issue, where a site was booted off of HNQ immediately following an outrage on Twitter, and following thatwhich sparked discussion, an official encouragement to use Twitter for actioningespecially since HNQ and changes to it had been frequently discussed on meta and this hadn't lead to change.
I'm not proud of my role in the latest issue with the mails to Amazon, and the tone of the discussion. I certainly regret the way that went, and I wish I hadn't reported this issue publicly. But with how things were going, I was unsure I would be taken seriously, and if anything would change if I would have reported it privately.
The latest incident showed me that after a reply that was more than adequate in my opinion, people wanted evidence and weren't satisfied with just a statement that they would improve and prevent e-mail addresses from being shared unexpectedly. From my point of view, this mainly shows a lack of trust, trust of a company I personally adore, and which has made this great site we all love to use.
I think this has all culminated in a negative spiral on meta. The more we get ignored, the more strongly and negatively we seem to respond, which in turn makes it harder to listen and respond adequately, which makes us get ignored even more.
Looking to the future, I can only hope SE will no longer encourage the use of Twitter to effect change, and will be more involved on meta and the ongoing discussions. I certainly hope we can go back to a situation where we can trust that SE will adequately respond to issues we raise as a community, even if they don't have to in order to stop the outrage.
I do hope people will grant SE the benefit of the doubt here. It's difficult to win back trust, but please try to assume good faith, and don't make this harder than it needs to be. Please don't go into a yes/no discussion.
And please, keep the legal stuff off MSO. If you truly believe SE is breaking a law, either assume they will handle it adequately, or mail [email protected]
if there's a real issue, the whole IANAL + wildly different opinions on the legality of things is just not productive.