The rudeness is intimately related to Dunbar's number, an iron law of the human condition in this fallen world. Stack Overflow can mitigate (and indeed has mitigated) Dunbar's number but no one can repeal this iron law.
Sorry. Bad luck. Good question, though.
EXPLANATION
A commenter has asked me to explain. Management describes Stack Overflow as a community. Whether the description and the word are literally correct is an etymological point one might debate but, in a Sapir-Whorf sense, the word muddles discussions like the one we are now having—which almost aren't really discussions at all. Too many potential participants, you see.
And that was Dunbar's point, wasn't it?
Consider: why are random drivers on big-city freeways often rude? Answer: because any given random driver will never see you again. He or she has no stake, and neither have you.
This is a fundamental problem a code of conduct can mitigate but never solve. Armies are organized into companies of 150 or so for this very reason, because, on average, individuals treat one another more decently when an intimate network—a thickly woven graph of redundant social interlinks—can reward them for doing so.
Some fallacies are apt to be offered in opposition at this stage of the presentation like, "Everyone has a stake in safe freeways" (true but beside the point), yet I would rather not lengthen the explanation. Given downvotes, few will be reading, anyway—and the longer, the fewer. I hope that the above conveys the gist.