We don't know if or when there will be another occasion that compels us to use our company voice to take a stance on something that's happening in the world. The fact is that we simply don't know what the world is going to be like for the people we serve, the people that work here or the climate in which we're striving to innovate and thrive. Frankly, that's a very good summary of many of the reasons that we chose to speak out against the immigration ban.
But the most important reason that we chose to speak out was because we firmly believe it was the right thing to do. It was the right thing to do by our employees that were affected directly by the ban or as a consequence of the ban, it was the right thing to do by our users all over the world that strongly identify with our view of what community means, and it was right of us to say: "that's wrong, it goes against our principles, it hurts our people and we shouldn't be doing it."
That didn't go as well as we hoped. While the post received a great deal of support from our users, it offended or angered others way more than we anticipated that it possibly could. To those in that group, we didn't intend to make you feel those feelings, and we certainly didn't want to make anyone feel that their voice wasn't as important as our own.
If we had to do it over, we'd definitely do it again, because it was the right thing for us to do. However, we would do it a little bit differently. While we hope the answer to "when might we feel compelled to speak out again?" is never, we're going to keep the following things in front of us if it turns out to be sooner than never:
Be as nice as we can be effective
If something threatens to undermine our business, our employees, or our view of what communities are to folks, it might be past the point where assuming good intentions remains a reasonable thing to do.
At the same time, it's better if we focus on what's wrong, how it relates to us, how it has or might impact us and very specifically why we feel it's important for all of you to consider it. Speaking out often means speaking with emotion, but we'll do a better job of tempering it.
Also, doing that sort of thing late on a Sunday night might not have been the greatest of ideas.
End with a call to action
If we're speaking out on something that we feel is a shared interest, we need to let you know what you can do to help. We also must be much more specific on what we expect you to share with us after reading what we wrote.
Make it belong here
There is an announcement on Meta Stack Exchange about a special new moderator-only tag, announcement, (similar to 'featured' and the status tags) that if applied, will alter the way the question is presented.
It'll be clear that what you're reading is something from the Stack Overflow team, and we'll be clear about what kind of feedback we're hoping to get.
Most of the time we'll be using that tag to provide updates on things, announce new features, announce events or contests that we're either facilitating or participating in some way, or just the usual stuff that's dissertative or expository more than socratic or mutually-engaging.
We'll use this feature any time we speak as a company about something.
In conclusion
It's been a very tense week. I want to personally thank every single one of you that communicated with us in a civil manner, and for your patience as I promised that we would be writing up a response based on what we gathered and learned from what you had to say.
If this does happen again, and we sincerely hope that nothing as bad or worse than what we reacted to comes to pass, we will do what we feel is the right thing to do, and we'll do our best to do it a bit better than we did this time.
If you feel that we've overlooked something, or have anything else that you'd like to share with us regarding this, please leave an answer or a comment.
Update after a whole lot of discussion.
And I hope that this gets everyone to a place where they can feel good enough about this to move on, happily.
We aren't saying that we'll never need to come engage with you here, or on MSO, if something really serious is going on in the real world and we need to not just post something but also have a conversation with you about it.
In all cases going forward that we can currently envision, we'd probably use the blog, and if things get too crazy on the blog or too difficult to moderate (e.g. a lot of noise from people that aren't even users), create an announcement to open a discussion on meta instead.
But that has to remain our call, and it needs to be okay if we do it.
Thank you to everyone that provided input, again. We do listen, and we do try our best to find solutions that can best serve everyone's needs and preferences, sometimes including our own :)
We'll Always Endeavor to Do What's Right
which will always involve some comparison to some set of moral, ethical, religious etc etc values. Seems unlikely anyone at HQ will ever be able to speak for all 6,653,677+ users. As far as MSO is concerned,Whats Right
ought start and end with SO, the QA site, site operations and the user base which makes it successful. For global issues, Joel can reach into his pocket and donate to MicroCelebrities Against Moral Repugnance, Just leave us out of it.You can't possibly speak for all users here
which is pretty much the point. Neither can Joel. It takes a special kind of savvy to alienate your own user base in multiple ways simultaneously: those who disagree politically; those who resent being unwillingly associated with it; those who dislike the polemic tone; those who thought MSO was about SO not politics; and those that dislike the users-be-damned attitude to re-opening the post over and over...probably others. Also, the users disaffected are perhaps the most active on SO. I'm note sure many even know about MSO