It does: it says the majority of people who saw the survey have chosen to not participate, and the majority of participants have rejected to respond to some questions. We have strong indication this data is not expressive for this community, nor are the presumptions that are integrated into the survey. The survey as such has been rejected, along with its premises/presumptions. I still think Fabio summed up the points best that many have made in the past in many discussions, until they gave up and became silent, in his post I linked above…
The low number of answers and participants are the sole means people still have to add their opinions if surveys create premises/presumptions that are taken for granted (but to which people disagree) and that can be only confirmed with any response (…when surveys become tautologies…). This number is expressive… but it seems to not matter and, at least so far, was just ignored in derivations. Again, all that was discussed already …