This is such a difficult topic to address. I hope this makes sense. It's a meandering of thoughts and I hope it's easy enough to follow and provides some answer.
I have to say, reading the linked article and this post I'm a little upset, but it does give me a perfect opportunity to speak frankly.
The experiment of men masquerading as women on the site in not uncommon, and while I applaud these men attempting to understand another person's experience, it is fundamentally flawed. These people are men, not women.
From way back when I wrote this post:
Declining Numbers of Women in Programming, What Can SO do to Help?
I didn't hold Stack Overflow to be particularly "sexist". The programming industry has been sexist (in my experience). I am a woman, look like one, talk like one and get treated like a moron on occasion, because of this fact -not on here though.
You have consistently failed to produce evidence to back up your assertions, while instead using once-off instances to justify broad policy changes that have had overwhelmingly negative repercussions on the company's relations with veteran users.
Well this is not true. They have repeatedly said they've had feedback telling them that the site is unwelcoming to certain classes of people over other classes of people. Now I cannot speak for men, or people of colour (even though I have a racial mix, I've experienced the world with white privilege), I can speak for my experience as a human woman.
My Experience on Stack Overflow as a human being who happens to be Female
I had a love hate relationship with the site from the early on. I first signed up in 2012? and didn't start participating until 2013. There were many issues that made my initiation to the site bumpy, that were nothing to do with the site. However, there were many issues that were intrinsically bound to the site that made it incredibly hard.
My first post on meta was met with support, but it wasn't long before that capsized. I failed to grasp the culture of meta. I didn't understand the humour. Didn't know when to use memes or which memes were ok. I was desperately trying to fit in. I would come up with ideas to help the site that were poorly received and I had a lot of difficulty understanding how to write a post that people would like. In fact, it's taken me five years to work that one out. Even now I cannot always predict what type of reception my posts will receive and it can be stressful if I'm writing anything that is personal (like this) or advocating change. Meta can respond unpredictably to requests for change.
Part of the reason (in my opinion) I didn't understand the culture, was because I am a woman and led a very different life. I got into programming later in life and didn't connect with a lot of stuff that people in my non-cyber programming world related to. This is where the site needs to be tolerant of people coming from varying backgrounds. Who do not understand the culture. Where English is a second language. Where they're used to being marginalised. None of us realised it was indeed the nature of Meta and it wasn't personal at all! If you didn't have the quirk, it was kinda your bad luck.
I found the massive downvotes and pile on of comments on meta distressing. It's easy to say to people, don't take the downvotes personally. There is limit to people's capacity to endure criticism and disagreement (downvotes signal disagreement on meta?). Some people do not tolerate a few downvotes, some can cope with 8 or 9. What about 20? or 30 downvotes, 50? or more. Over 100? You see it's easy for people to say, well it doesn't matter. More often than not, they are people who have not experienced relentless downvotes and a pile on of comments from so many people, often reiterating the same thing and telling you how wrong you are and why or at worst, to go someone else. People did not pull their punches. It was at best good for character growth, but mostly gruelling.
I know I am not the only person who feels this way.
Over the years, I've talked to dozens of female programmers who do not like the site and will not open an account as a woman on the site. They post as a genderless blob. But the interesting thing is. I know as many, in fact more men who are too frightened to post on the site. My peers I studied with. It turned out, I was the exception to the rule. Most people inexperienced in programming were terrified of our site! Many high rep users of the main site refuse to post on meta. I can go and drag up links. I honestly don't have the energy. But suffice to say, this is one user of the site, one person, one "woman" who was not happy with the culture of the site and I let the Network know that in no uncertain terms. I've communicated with Community Managers for years about the site's culture and how it needs to change. This is long before the "Welcoming blog".
A well timed tweet might have co-ordinated with the timing of the site's launch to change things, but I suspect that was more expedient than totally unexpected. As I know for a fact the site was trying to improve things for a long time before the welcoming blog, it was extremely difficult, due to the push back it would receive on Meta. Yet the complaints kept rolling in.
There was a large number of people avoiding the site. We didn't hear about it, because they were avoiding the site.
My personal observation of the problems of Meta is this: It has been a very small, but loud and active group within the community that has made it more or less miserable to new people participating on Meta (not Main) for many years. It is also my personal observation, that those same people don't have the same power or influence over Meta today as they had before. Because: some of them have left, many of them have been suspended many times since the welcoming blog and the launch of the Code of Conduct. People other than these people are feeling more supported and speaking out on Meta.
I am a strong advocate for this community.
Divisions, disappointment and pillory: how can we make meta a more enjoyable, productive space for everyone?
What does our long term community need? What does our long term community need to feel valued?
I do not like to see new people come onto the site misinformed or with an attitude of being entitled:
When is a comment hostile or unfriendly? (Educating newer users how to flag comments)
I'm a strong advocate of change to improve our site.
I love our community and I can see how people have felt thrown under the bus, but we also need to see where we've been at fault. I personally have made my fair share of mistakes and I have been held accountable and face up to them. Just as do other moderators and the Community Team. It's time our long term user base did the same.
No one is saying that new users are more important that our existing users.
No one is saying low quality stuff is ok on the site.
I have actively sought to remove low quality posts off the site as expediently as possible.
Saying we want have a zero tolerance for abuse on the site does not mean our community is bad. This rule applies equally to all the people who come here and dump homework or abuse people when they get feedback.
No one has said, anywhere or any time, "pamper the new comer, hold their hand, tell them everything is OK". No. That is not what the network is telling us. They're simply saying, "don't abuse them". How hard can that be? Instead of having a go (and believe me, it's tempting at times), flag the stuff and walk on by. Upvote posts that suggest ways to get rid of low quality junk.
It's time to put all this behind us and move forward. We're moving on in leaps and bounds.
Fun fact.
I came back on the site to find this comment:
If you want to school someone, go ahead and have children of your own if you don't already have one. Don't make me one of them. I can comment however I like. — xxx 3 hours ago
Hm wonder if this comment would have been level towards a man? You decide.