I am concerned about how the code of conduct is being pointed out in practice. In its short time of existence (close to 2 months), I have seen multiple occurrences of comments claiming to report a violation of the code of conduct in response to downvotes, close votes, edits for clarity, and even comments with constructive criticism:
you should also read at least once the Code of Conduct before turning away new users from Stack Overflow. The question asked here is far from perfect but voting to close it (or even downvoting the question) is a fine way to turn away a newbie from "these arrogant ****** from SO"
I'm not asking anyone to do my work, I'm asking in spirit of what SO is supposed to be, a QA platform for people to share knowledge. [...] Implementation is not a step that has come yet. I just want to discuss the approach here (this is also not some open-ended question). Can you tell me how I'm violating the "How to Ask" policy that you just posted because I read it and I don't see it? It's kind of offensive when you come out and suggest that "I'm asking other people to do my work for me" [...], it paints the question in a negative light and spreads misinformation to other users. I also think it is a gross violation of the new code of conduct and misleading to people who may want to share knowledge [...]
What is the reason for downvoting my Question? Are you following the code of conduct?
These are only the ones I stumbled upon myself from regular activity. I built a SEDE query which looks for comments mentioning the code of conduct in some way, from the beginning of august to present time. At the time of writing, there are 77 results for case-insensitive "code of conduct" or (union) "stackoverflow.com/conduct" (searching for "CoC" triggered too many false positives to be useful). Out of these, I counted at least 14 comments which are clearly an accusation of the same kind, and we're only considering comments reachable from SEDE (it is likely that a fair number of these comments were permanently deleted by a moderator by now). Some more examples from this list:
To the downvoter: at least have the courage to make clear who you are and why you downvoted it. Or offer a better alternative. Have you missed the new Code of Conduct?
I wonder who voted to close this question as unclear. Btw no need to vote it down before asking for clarifications. OP is a new contributo Be nice, and check out Code of Conduct. stackoverflow.com/conduct
It seems the famous StackOverflow Code of Conduct does not stop people from downvoting questions they don't understand themselves.
Not sure why this was put on hold. [...] Making this a very valid question. I feel the question was closed by people who do not know [...]. Nor is the fact it was closed without further explanation/comments against the new code of conduct. OP only has 6 points to his name, a little courtesy would have been nice.
Downvoters and close-voters - stackoverflow.com/conduct . This is not a judgement zone for people making silly mistakes. I'll admit this was a very glaring oversight on my part. I thank @_____ for helping me instead of downvoting.
In all my active years on Stack Overflow, I don't recall the old "Be Nice" policy being used as some kind of "shield" against other users' moderating actions like this. I feel that we should treat this as a serious problem, since it's intimidating to whoever is constantly accused of not abiding to the CoC, when all they did was either instructing the user to our guidelines or curating the site. There is even evidence of this intimidation on Meta. Although to my knowledge this concern wasn't yet given a dedicated Meta question, the frustration that comes along with it has been lifted before:
[link] Of course there are some bad apples. Just as there's this small very vocal community of Stack Overflow Haters who post all over the internet about how offensive Stack Overflow is, there are also a few members who get their kicks by trolling people and being rude to them. But lumping all of us Experienced users into the same group as those people and telling us that we're being unwelcoming, that we don't understand the code of conduct, that our moderation techniques are harmful, while at the same time validating the people who claim that downvotes are personal attacks and that closing a question is offensive... Well that hurts. And it's very discouraging.
In fact, such an accusation sometimes feels like a breach of the CoC itself, since the accuser is not "being open when receiving feedback", and so not contributing to a positive exchange. On the other hand, I would not rely on flagging all of these occurrences as "unkind" either.
I understand that the code of conduct was the outcome of multiple iterations with community feedback, but some issues cannot be predicted without being already in effect. I cannot help but wonder whether it can be updated to address this concern. Rather than Band-Aiding over each of these comments with a "no longer needed" flag, it would be nice (no pun intended) to fix the underlying problem in this document.
Is this issue worth acting upon? How can we prevent the code of conduct from being used like a verbal shield against constructive criticism or moderation mechanisms?