(Despite a title similar to Is the new Code of Conduct over the top?, this one's focus is different.)
I agree in principle with the addition of the Code and how it's linked to in the help as clarification: the previous short "be nice" as the complete policy has proven to be insufficient to get everyone on the same page.
However, its current wording seems to be takings things too far, thus making it prone to abuse in the other direction. These are the red flags it raised for me when reading through it:
The formulations are extremily repressive. "No X." "No Y." "No Z." "We do not tolerate..." Report early, report often. Be kind and friendly, or else!
With this repressive mindset expressed by the Code, SE -- intentionally or unknowingly -- is pressurizing moderators into being overzealous in its enforcement, so they will tend to shoot down anything flagged, on the assumption that there always exists some twisted interpretation and someone who will claim that it's somehow offensive to them. (After all, it's much better to quietly disappear something than risk having the wrath of SE upon your head for undermining their key campaign.)
- True, moderators were generally shooting down anything flagged before, too. But there was an unspoken guarantee to use common sense when handling the flags, which made flaggers restrain themselves. But now, the CoC declares political correctness top priority over everything.
- Which includes SO's purpose and core values because the Code says nothing about them whatsoever and how the campaign relates to them -- which means that the CoC writers never thought of it, so it doesn't as far as they are concerned, "friendly" language is all that they care about. (At least, that's what the result of their work effectively says, whether they meant it or not.)
- Now, political correctness is an extremily flimsy and subjective grounds for accusations that anything whatsoever could be chalked up to. So, a mandate to enforce it above all else now prohibits using common sense and forces mods to take all flags at face value.
- Which effectively gives a flagger an official guarantee that any their "unfriendliness" or "discrimination" accusations, however ridiculous, will most probably be acted upon, and makes anyone posting anything guilty by default.
- True, moderators were generally shooting down anything flagged before, too. But there was an unspoken guarantee to use common sense when handling the flags, which made flaggers restrain themselves. But now, the CoC declares political correctness top priority over everything.
As a consequence, people will flat-out ignore flawed posts out of fear that any comment that so much as allows a thought that it's less than ideal can be labelled "unkind".
- Moderators don't even need to actually be overzealous for the effect to arise: it's enough if users think that they may. The Code's current attitude certainly gives the green light to such an interpretation.
It mandates adding lots of noise into messages. Look at the examples: each of them is using three lines of text for what could be expressed in one! (I'm not defending those "expressions", only saying that the suggested ones can be of a comparable length, too.)1
To show how this is a problem, first a little background:
- World cultures can generally be classified into "polite" cultures and "direct" cultures. "Polite" cultures tend to insert obligatory niceties into everything and speak in code for relation honing; "direct" cultures tend to ditch redundancies and speak their mind to efficiently pass information.2
- Americans appear to be one of the more "polite" cultures in the world,3 so the Code's authors may not even see anything unusual about the phrasing they chose!
- Online cultures tend to be more direct than their offline counterparts. The Tact Filters article that the linked post refers to ascribes that to "nerdiness" of the hacker culture. But from experience, it rather looks like that it's because there's less "relation honing" going on and there's more communication to do than in live socializing -- so time is much more precious, and as a consequence, in online communities, you show respect by respecting others' time rather than by saying niceties. It's also because written media is less effective than live communication in bringing one's point across,4 necessitating making oneself more clear to compensate. For global communities, cultural differences contribute to this, too, not only because different cultures "even out", but because the unspoken codes used by "polite" cultures are very localized and wildly different, thus becoming unusable outside of their confines.
- World cultures can generally be classified into "polite" cultures and "direct" cultures. "Polite" cultures tend to insert obligatory niceties into everything and speak in code for relation honing; "direct" cultures tend to ditch redundancies and speak their mind to efficiently pass information.2
Now, the examples are at least twice as long as the text they are supposed to replace. So it can be said they force at least a 100% "niceness tax" on any communication. This is way too high for a global online community (and doubly so for an IT global online community) and thus would be seen by the average member as a millstone around their neck, again making them unwilling to participate.
- E.g. how would you react if this post was 2 times as long while carrying the same amount of information?
- (I would probably write it off as not showing enough effort at clarity ("too long, didn't read").)
- And, as said in the note,1 this cannot simply be written off as just an exaggeration for clarity.
- This even contradicts the core values of SE which say "get straight to the point, avoid any noise".
- E.g. how would you react if this post was 2 times as long while carrying the same amount of information?
If the above reasoning is correct, the Code's language ought to be toned down to fix the above overkills while carrying the same general message. Unless the described consequences are the intention, of course.
- Actually, fixing just the general language is enough as per note 1.
(I'm intentionally reserving any concrete fix suggetions for answers and/or another post and am asking for principal agreement for start.)
(Likewise, I ask you to leave aside the Code's message itself -- I know that there are disagreements about it, but adding them to the mix here will derail the discussion and undermine the current suggestion. With SE's fanatical stance on the venue, promoting any corrections is hard enough as it is.)
1The formulations' overshoot could be dismissed as merely an exaggeration for clarity, but the Code's harsh authoritarian tone suggests that any infractions are going to be dealt with with extreme prejudice, so it's risky to try to be smarter than the lawmakers here.
2Here's an article by the International Ombudsman Association outlining the pros and cons of both approaches and the problems that arise when they clash.
4In live communication, you also have powerful things like tone, mimics, body language and the environment for the presentation at your disposal.