Yeah, imagine if someone started stalking you on the Internet and making up random assumptions about your employer based on the questions you asked on a question-and-answer site. Oh and wait, they are doing this slanderous gossip under a pseudonym themselves, so you can't even call them out personally!
Stuff like this is what drives away underrepresented groups from engaging on the internet. Maybe everyone who upvoted and participated in the uninformed speculation from 'user5994461 should reconsider.
I expect if the author learns about this exchange he would never ask a question that has even a remote possibility of inviting speculation about levels of his knowledge or practices at a company where he happens to work at the time (in other words, pretty much any question at all) using his name.
That kind of public ridicule and possible resulting flak from management is why more and more developers participate in knowledge exchange by asking questions from under a throwaway pseudonym (much like user5994461), and only answer or edit other questions from accounts that connect to their identity in any way.