@dpk @mossfet 22% for me. I think there's an interesting nuance in the 'privilege blindness' section. I benefit from social privilege because I'm dealing in the subfield of computing where aspects of my background are visible: people can see me and my ethnicity, hear my accent, read my writing style etc. But there are ways in which underprivileged people can use the anonymity of the Internet to make a neutral first impression - not necessarily better than being in the privileged classes in the first place, but better than what they'd experience with their background fully visible. So in that way, tech is both democratizing in that it gives everyone a meritocratic start, and discriminating, in that ongoing secrecy is the price to pay for this treatment.