It was hard to accept some of the (valid) criticism, especially the idea that women and people of color felt particularly unwelcome.
[..]
Many people, especially those in marginalized groups do feel less welcome. We know because they tell us.
— https://stackoverflow.blog/2018/04/26/stack-overflow-isnt-very-welcoming-its-time-for-that-to-change
For the purposes of a constructive discussion on solving this problem, can we have some concrete examples of how this manifests? I feel that dealing in generalities (e.g. "biases") doesn't really help here, since either the general idea is rejected outright (e.g. "I'm not biased!", "Bias studies don't work."), or everyone interprets the meaning of those generalities differently and we end up discussing different things. On the other hand, we could probably all agree on specific instances of such issues if presented with some.
Are we talking about:
- Minority groups being treated statistically more unfair than other groups? E.g., more of their questions are getting closed and/or downvoted at the same level of quality?
- Minority groups experiencing specific slurs or other direct attacks?
- Minority groups feeling generally less secure about participating in the system as it exists because of their background; in this case, what specifically about Stack Overflow's default modus operandi is troubling to them?
- Anything else I'm not thinking of?
(Please anonymise specific examples as appropriate. Provide enough context so the example can be judged on its own merits as a fully formed data point.)