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In the blog post New decade, new survey goals (& reminder to take the survey before it closes next week!), which refers to "gender and cultural gaps", the term "affinity coding group" is used:

In order to achieve our goal of obtaining a data set representative of everyone who codes, and, more importantly, continuing the work that is necessary to serve underrepresented groups of coders who may not feel welcome on Stack Overflow, we need to reach beyond our networks. We’re working on this internally by strategically advertising the Survey to followers of affinity coding groups and emphasizing our desire to learn about the coding universe as a whole, no matter where they live or what websites they frequent for troubleshooting technical problems. These efforts can only take us so far, though, so we’re asking for your help.

This blog post is the only hit I got when I googled for the phrase. As a non-American, I hadn't even heard the term "affinity group" before.

What's an "affinity coding group"? Is it a group with a common technical interest, or a group of people in the same "minority group" (is that the currently used term?)?

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  • 12
    I'm an American and I haven't heard of an "affinity group" either. Feb 22, 2020 at 1:02
  • So they just look at their competitors to see what they do better. Feb 23, 2020 at 14:08

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According to Wikipedia:

An affinity group is a group formed around a shared interest or common goal, to which individuals formally or informally belong.

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