Compiling this data was not as hard as I expected, let's go through the data and the shiny graphs!
Age of Beeple
Most are above 24! Seems we got an older average age compared to a lot of social media. It would be interesting to see how many came here with experiences from independent forums before Reddit.
Where Beeple reside
This one's a big graph. Though we can notice most people are from the US. Would be nice to see more countries represented though a big part of it likely has to do with language. (You will need to open the big graph in another tab, it's too big to show properly.)
Gender identity of Beeple
So, as expected, mostly men. However, less than expected which is nice to see. There should be outreach to at least equalize this.
Sexual orientation of Beeple
This is kinda surprising. It seems we managed to get a lot more LGBTQ+ people than expected considering most of you all come from Reddit - so this is nice to see. This is most likely because of our focus on a safe space.
Whiteness of Beeple
As expected, mostly white which is unfortunate. I think there's outreach to be done in that regard as well.
Neurodivergence of Beeple
We seem to have a really surprising amount of neurodivergent people! Definitely nice to see.
Beeple with disabilities
I.. have no idea how to interpret this data so I'll just say, shiny graph.
Beeple's awareness of the Fediverse
Most knew about the fediverse but still a good 20% had not heard about it so glad to see you all managed to find your way here!
How Beeple have been dealing with Beehaw
It seems most people feel relatively confident in their ability to use Beehaw and most people seem to enjoy it. That makes me really happy to see. Feels rewarding, feels good.
Conclusion
I wanna thank everyone for the feedback about the survey and its questions - we'll do better next time! I'm glad we did this survey because it shows the areas to work on in terms of outreach! Thank you all for your participation!
if you are not: you sound completely indistinguishable from every white poster on here who thinks the idea of not being the center of attention is some sort of attack on their identity. the fact that you immediately jump to "well, you're assuming" does not help you beat the allegations here either.
very bluntly: this is white fragility and you are again demonstrating to me that maybe the "unfortunate" phrasing is actually the correct one here despite all the ire it's drawn. if your "diversity" is when five white people in a room have opinions and those five white people happen to be from different countries and have distinct culture that's essentially just white people jerking themselves off. there are a million other spaces that cater to that online, so if you're interested in that i'd recommend going literally anywhere else.
Can you elaborate on that? Like, I honestly think an American, a Russian and an Albanian having different opinions would be considered diverse. Aren’t those vastly different cultures despite the fact that they’re white?
Same thing goes for other skin colors as well. What you’re saying in my opinion is akin to calling Japanese and Chinese people “the same”. Or Persian and Arabs.
And also,
Please, is this the language we’re using here? The person above is clearly not trying to be a white supremacist, neither were they indecent. You could have used a better phrasing.
we've had a pretty productive convo in the Discord about this so to quickly summarize for non-IronTwo people since i think my wording there captures better what i'm getting at:
the beliefs of europeans and english-speaking peoples are some of the most hegemonically represented opinions in the world. we recognize there are incredibly distinct cultural beliefs between even these groups--but for our purposes we're not interested in the granularity of those--overwhelmingly those are already represented everywhere else and in almost every conversation we have here just by virtue of the language we're using and constituency we serve. we don't need to go out of our way to find those opinions. we do for non-white opinions, voices, and community members, though; and on many issues there's opinion granularity among those non-white people that can't be found just by talking to europeans and english-speaking peoples.