It reinforces the idea of the IT industry as a place for men, and the male gaze[0], as well as injecting sexuality into an entirely asexual domain for no reason. If we want computing to be inclusive, and I personally do, then we should make representations of computing inclusive.
That is diametrically opposed from being "anti" anything.
I thought the two on the left were women and the one on the right was a hair band rocker (man).
I think if anything this is confirming your individual biases about what men and women should look like, which is part of the problem with our tech community. Even if I'm wrong about the rocker (likely), the problem isn't the picture - it's all of us.
That is diametrically opposed from being "anti" anything.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male_gaze