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I see more and more users putting profile names related to "Monica". Is there an official post of what is all this movement around "Monica"?

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    here's the summary: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/333965/… Jan 17, 2020 at 19:52
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    I'd say, at this point, the quickest path to a TL;DR summary is this news article on The Register.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jan 17, 2020 at 19:56
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    @MartijnPieters FWIW they also posted an update article discussed here at MSE. "Stack Overflow makes peace with ousted moderator, wants to start New Year with 2020 vision on codes of conduct"
    – gnat
    Jan 18, 2020 at 5:29
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    She was fired due to something she said in private communication with the company regarding the new rules on personal pronouns. The company said they had good reason to believe that she would not enforce/follow the rules based on what she said. Monica says this isn’t true. Neither side has posted a transcript of that conversation.
    – BSMP
    Jan 18, 2020 at 20:54
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    You can find the information about it, here and here. Feb 19, 2020 at 21:06

2 Answers 2

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The best summary that you can get is over on MSE - Summing up the main issues (The Story So Far). A Tl;DR is:

Monica was a moderator on 6 different sites and was a highly decorated moderator. She had contributed frequently to the growth of the entire Stack Exchange community and was appointed as a moderator on MSE in recognition of that. She was fired after she requested clarifications on a new policy and a change in the CoC. Here is her version of the story: Stack Overflow Inc., sinat chinam, and the goat for Azazel .

A lot of moderators then resigned due to the way Stack Exchange treated her. Firing mods and forced relicensing: is Stack Exchange still interested in cooperating with the community?. Stack Exchange later spoke about her in newspapers. The Director and CTO of Stack Exchange later posted public apologies, but didn't do anything to follow up their apologies. Finally after taking the legal route (Stack Overflow is doing me ongoing harm; it's time to fix it!), Monica was able to sign off on an agreement (Update: an agreement with Monica Cellio), which wasn't that helpful.

Later on, Stack Exchange fired a couple of Community Managers (who work for the company) which started another set of moderator resignations. Firing Community Managers: Stack Exchange is not interested in cooperating with the community, is it?. These two community managers were known to be very deeply involved with the community, which makes this issue a bit more complex. (This is where we are now)

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    Something which people haven't mentioned earlier is that Monica was #2 on Stack Moderators Teams. Jan 17, 2020 at 21:21
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    Also, something that apparently a lot of people miss is that the problem with Monica isn't about Monica. In that it's not a single error or misjudgement SE did. There has been a growing problem for literal years. The actions SE took against Monica would in no way be justified even without previous missteps however, combined with them it was the catalist for a drastic shift in opinion about the management. It is sort of the straw that broke the camel's back...but we already had a full load of straws, this was an entire log dropped on the poor animal. Jan 17, 2020 at 21:53
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    It's fair to say this series of missteps will soon become the subject of textbooks.
    – theMayer
    Jan 17, 2020 at 22:01
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    @theMayer: "... and that was how Stack Overflow ended. Our next case study is ..."
    – Jongware
    Jan 17, 2020 at 23:19
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    @YorSubs: Without reading the original transcript and from puzzling things together from here and there over time, my understanding is that Monica argued that writing in a gender neutral way should be allowed (i.e., not using any pronouns by default). The first version of the CoC explicitly did not allow for this which is why this was discussed. In the revised CoC, gender neutral writing is accepted but this revision came first after Monica was fired and the events that followed. At that point in time, there were already a lot of other issues, e.g. how SE handled the whole situation.
    – Shaido
    Feb 21, 2020 at 1:56
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    Nice summary. Now it is visible the sad truth: what the company did, this summarized, is not fixable, it does not mean how strongly and long do they work on it. But they don't even really try, except some very pathetic lip service, from which everybody knows that it is only cheap lie. The consequences are obvious.
    – peterh
    Feb 22, 2020 at 15:46
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The Meta forums should all have a Monica tag... the fact that there isn't (and won't be) one is a testament to the fundamental problem with Stack Exchange: Incentives are not aligned between the corporation and the community (which is the core cause of all the problems, Monica among them).

Seek aligned incentives (in life and business). Everything misaligned results in friction and at times fracture.

UPDATE

This thread is an example of toxicity and willful deafness. "Monica" is a poor name for a tag. OK, then suggest one better that actually hooks to the issue as it is popularly known. "Company" and "Community" may mean something to those (few) of you "in the know" (e.g. who know that those tags relate to the blow up and mass resignations of moderators). For the rest of us, the Monica incident was our entre to the topic (which we know is much larger than that one incident).

I, and the OP, and other posters here, may be misguided noobs (or whatever we are). But we come to this thread honestly and simply. The hostility directed to my post (and at least one other on this thread) is a symptom of the problem. Y'all could use these posts to explain and build. To start with an assumption of positive intent. But instead y'all choose to downvote, degrade, and mis-engage.

Hope it makes you happy.

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    This is nonsense. There is nothing stopping moderators or even regular users from creating a [monica] tag. Staff has done nothing to prevent that. However, I do not feel that this tag would serve any purpose. We don't need to continue discussing Monica; there is nothing more that can be done about that. For discussions about the relationship between the company and the community, we have two tags: [community] and [company] (the latter of which is a synonym of [stack-exchange]). Feb 19, 2020 at 1:10
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    I think you are missing the underlying conversation. There is an issue, that came to a head with the Monica incident. A Monica tag is not to talk about the Monica incident, it would be to tag discussions related to the overall issue of misaligned management behavior and attitude toward moderators/the community. "Monica" is simply the tag, not the topic itself. Feb 19, 2020 at 1:20
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    That is a poor name for the tag, as the issues are unrelated to Monica herself. They are much larger than that. Monica's dismissal and the subsequent bungling of the issue by staff members was only a symptom of the larger problem. We do need to talk about the problem, that's why I pointed out the two tags, both of which were expressly created for this purpose. But we do not need to plaster discussions about it with Monica's name. She never asked for that, and it would not help to make those discussions discoverable. Feb 19, 2020 at 1:22
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    @CodyGray So suggest a better name for a tag that is understandable by those (many) of us who know that the Monica incident is one part of a larger whole, but have no idea (and never will) that "community" and "company" are tied to the larger issue. My suggestion is weak? Fine. Perhaps try to come up with a tag that has meaning (for the OP, for me, for the many who were introduced to the issue via the Monica fiasco) rather than going on a rant. But hey, it is your community. Treat it how you like to be treated. Feb 19, 2020 at 17:17
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    Hi - I'm not being toxic by simply disagreeing with your assessment of the circumstance, or disagreeing with you wanting a tag for this. This is even more in the case that the person involved herself didn't want a Meta tag created.
    – Makoto
    Feb 19, 2020 at 18:34
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    Web culture would create a new word for incidents by appending"gate", such as Monicagate.
    – tkruse
    Feb 20, 2020 at 23:43
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    @tkruse Excellent point. Agreed. And if the letters "monica" are too messy to touch, this could be "ModeratorGate2019" or something that is narrow enough to specify the concrete eruption, yet broad enough to capture the broad scale and impact of the event. Feb 21, 2020 at 4:04
  • @tkruse - appending gate to a scandalous event that ultimately led to a media frenzy, or otherwise gained cultural awareness is far older than web culture. :) (or is it?)
    – ryyker
    Dec 29, 2020 at 20:02
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    This rant doesn't provide any answer to the question that was actually asked. Mar 26, 2021 at 7:42

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