(snip) I have posted a self-portrait before, though, so those who remember it would know. Though I posed with a bunch of my cameras, so I wouldn't be surprised if this crowd could remember them more than what I look like. And on that note, do we know the demographic the OP falls into? No pictures posted by or of them, as far as I know. No website in their sig line.
There was a link to a YouTube channel in the Catlabs signature line (interestingly, the signature recently changed and the link is no longer there - though is easy to find). If you go to the YouTube channel, you will see some "stock" footage from other companies, and some "original" Catlabs footage. I have no idea whether the person in the Catlabs-created footage is the poster.
The Catlabs-created content (despite all the harping) does not show diversity - only one person (diversity is not homogeneity, regardless of demographic group). The only diversity is seen in footage that was not created by Catlabs. Yes, I investigated this during the last doppelganger thread.
I suspect this, like the signature line itself, may mysteriously change soon.
Now, in Catlabs' defense, I really don't care what demographic the company or poster falls in. Sure, there may be curiosity, but it is immaterial to the discussion as far as I'm concerned, and can lead to fallacy arguments.
I do not object to the claims of bias, nor do I refute it's existence.
What I take exception to is articles with poor scientific methods, misinterpretation/misrepresentation, judging people as being prejudiced solely by virtue of their gender/skin tone, and word versus deed.
These threads no longer frustrate me; rather, I am beginning to find them quite amusing.
However, I'm sure if we all took the time, we could probably find some common footing regarding Catlabs' comments. At the moment, one extreme statement will beget comments at opposite extremes. I seriously doubt any of us believe bias does not exist - I think the question is the extent, and whether it has been getting better (and I'm sure our older community members can attest that is has been).
Taking some time to deal with similarities and find common ground may spawn a more constructive conversation on the subject.