First, I would like to point out that this is a very low-priority item, regardless of whether we establish that the placeholders are indeed "inclusive" or not. I say that to mean, any consequences of this issue are very, very minor. The change being inconsequential to even the users hypothetically most affected by the issue makes it sound not worthwhile to me.
Second, we also need to acknowledge that what you're reading as a "value proposition" simply wasn't designed as one. It's not a language rank. It's not a list of languages and how they compare to each other. As you've pointed out, the supposed data behind "php and c are less liked than html and c#" includes many more languages than these 4, leading me to believe this was not intended as any sort of actual depiction of value. If it's not actually depicting value, then reading it as if it was is just... incorrect.
Third, and finally, I don't think it's a stretch to say that this was almost certainly written to be humorous, in exactly the way that you lament as "the same old bias PHP users [have faced] for years". What you call a "bias" is something that's been a meme and in-joke in the programming community almost as long as PHP has existed, among both PHP developers and others alike; I think casting it solely in a negative light, as a "bias", is short-sighted, and just not correct. A programming language doesn't suffer from being the punchline of these jokes, and PHP developers don't suffer from jokes being made about their language.
At the end of the day... I really do think they're just placeholders, making this change unnecessary overall.
js
instead ofphp
. It reads as an objection against an "anti-php-bias"...