Disclaimer: These are my own thoughts on the matter. They do not in any way represent the views of Stack Exchange, or Stack Overflow Careers. I'm just a programmer with an opinion.
Discriminating against fields of endeavor opens up a very interesting little box. I'm going to go off on a tangent, but just a small one.
Software released under the terms of the GNU GPL (any version) can be used to teach children about kittens or guide nuclear missiles - in fact the license clearly states:
for any purpose.
That is to say, there's plenty of precedent in the programming community to produce things and then get the hell out of the way of anyone using them, provided that they do two things:
- Respect your intent, which is to make the lives of your fellow programmer easier
- Respect the terms in which people can use whatever you produce in order to meet rule number one
Stack Overflow Careers doesn't take anyone with money to spend. In fact, they're more than well-aware of a company wide money back guarantee which is pretty easily stated:
If you don't like what you got here, you don't have to pay for it.
This means, it's not inconceivable for them to realize that a client simply isn't going to be a good fit for any programmer using Careers, and politely refund the money they spent after wishing them the best of luck. Because, you know, when you make USB gadgets that shock kittens and you ask your developers to wear those collars during unit tests they must run during an interview, you've crossed a line - possibly three.
But, what if they're hiring folks to work on something else?
And that's just it - you don't know. I was recruited twice (outside of Careers) by folks promising everything that would make Joel just giddy to work there, if he worked on file systems and actually needed a job. Both jobs entailed doing really interesting things with something called GlusterFS.
How was I supposed to know that one company operated hundreds of thousands of GRE tunnels to Romania helping people send spam, while the other worked on high performance ad servers that knew (and broadcast, for a fee) more about you than most of your friends? Nothing about the public presence of either company gave any indicator that these sorts of shenanigans were going on.
You don't know what good or evil you might be doing until you're given good or evil to do.
I really hope that we don't get in the business of denying service to companies that (through the way they treat their programmers) are doing exactly what we want companies to do - treat programmers well, in a manner that makes them happy to be programmers.
If they can't manage to actually hire and retain anyone, then, well, they need to work on their granny-jacking problem and wonder why ping-pong tables and an X-box just wasn't enough.
You do actually interview them as they interview you, right? Because - even 'charities' sometimes have ulterior motives.