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A note to the reader:
I posted this question because I felt that something more needed to be done than I had already done. I was wrong. After a spirited, but civilized debate, a definitive answer was posted by moderator Ed Cottrell. I wish to bring to your attention the following portion of that answer (emphasis added):

... the best solution is just go ahead and edit it yourself. In this case, the author of the post didn't mind your edit, so this really was the best solution.

I respectfully request that we leave it that, and drop the matter. And my apologies to KemyLand, since it has become abundantly clear to me that no harm was intended, and that KemyLand is a person of extraordinary character. I hope you will show the support and respect that KemyLand deserves.


What is the correct course of action when a user posts malicious code as a joke?

Here's the answer that is the source of my concern. In the first version of the answer, the author provided a complete set of code that could be compiled and run. If any user was foolish enough to actually run the code, the code would attempt to wipe their hard drive.

I edited the answer to replace the malicious line of code with something harmless, and the author accepted that change. However, in the discussion that followed, it's clear that the author is unrepentant, and does not appreciate the gravity of the situation.

Having lost a hard drive to a mechanical failure, I can tell you that it is a catastrophic event to lose a hard drive that isn't fully backed up. So I feel that it's beyond irresponsible for the author to post that code. And I think the author of that post needs to be corrected.

What is my correct course of action at this point?

Edit: Based on Servy's answer and the discussion between Servy and Carpetsmoker, it seems that the question comes down to this: Is it useful to flag the post for moderator attention? Assuming that the flag is declined, does flagging provide useful information to the mods. Will a series of similar flags against a single user expose a pattern of behavior. Or will each flag be declined, and then forgotten?

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  • 18
    Moderator flag...with details.
    – Paulie_D
    Mar 10, 2016 at 20:38
  • 90
    That's why we hate fun on Stack Overflow :-P ... Mar 10, 2016 at 20:39
  • 17
    I seriously would like not to have written that answer. It's right now getting hard-downvoted because of all this hassle, even given that the answer is valid, responds to the OP's question, and the harmful code has been removed. Of course, there are also delete posts as of now. Seriously, I'm not sure if the joke here was my system("sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root /") line (wasn't intended as a joke, BTW), or all the bad reputation my answer gained...
    – 3442
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:35
  • 14
    @KemyLand Welcome to the meta effect. On the upside, you'll probably also get more upvotes ;-) I wouldn't worry about a few downvotes. Mar 10, 2016 at 21:39
  • 10
    IMHO, it is easy to know when not to do something. Consider what would happen if everybody did it. What if everybody put "jokes" in their code snippets that wiped the whole drive? Would SO be a joke then? Yes.
    – doug65536
    Mar 10, 2016 at 22:57
  • 14
    Ah, so it wasn't a joke then? What was it then, an example of something malicious? This is like saying what to mix to make a bomb on a chemistry site. Even if you didn't intend anyone to mix those chemicals.
    – doug65536
    Mar 10, 2016 at 23:08
  • 49
    @doug65536: I did never intended that as a "joke", but rather just wrote some line of code to put inside the NeverRunThis function, and thought that rm -rf --no-preserve-root / was a good example of something you should never run. Is it that hard to understand?
    – 3442
    Mar 11, 2016 at 2:27
  • 24
    When posting dangerous code, put zero width spaces at key points in the code, the error will confuse the new users so much, that the only way they can solve the problem is retyping it from scratch, hopefully quitting in the process for a easier code to copy that just works.
    – Ferrybig
    Mar 11, 2016 at 9:46
  • 10
    Downvote for suggestion of physical violence Mar 11, 2016 at 14:52
  • 11
    There's all the difference in the world between "malicious" and "dangerous".
    – matt
    Mar 11, 2016 at 15:27
  • 10
    That line of code has nothing to do with the question or answer. Including such a line without context or explanatory warning seems malicious to me, even though OP probably thought it was funny.
    – TylerH
    Mar 11, 2016 at 16:00
  • 11
    @KemyLand You still do not seem to understand the potential damage of you answer. Is it that hard to understand?
    – edc65
    Mar 12, 2016 at 2:24
  • 12
    @edc65: Eh... sorry? I already iterated several times that it was not the best of my ideas, and if someone would have been dismissed enough, it would have been really harmful. Yet, I didn't intended so, neither did I intended for that to be a joke, but rather some sort of placeholder code. Please don't be that harsh/misleading if you don't understand/know the context in which you're talking.
    – 3442
    Mar 12, 2016 at 2:38
  • 9
    I'm so confused about this. Unless someone is stupid enough to be signed-in as root (which systems support this now days?), and then compile&execute the code, the user would have to provide a password/signature for the sudo command anyway, which mean the answer is completely harmless for anyone who didn't override the default do-not-run-as-root settings. Am I missing something? Mar 12, 2016 at 22:57
  • 14
    @KemyLand It got posted on /r/programming, where Stack Exchange will forever be the worst place ever, plus the person who posted it fabricated a story about you intentionally trying to destroy hard drives to punish amateurs, so any comments that get posted in the next day are probably not going to be very constructive Mar 13, 2016 at 4:19

3 Answers 3

149

The Problem

I agree with you that this is a problem. People shouldn't copy and run code they don't understand from Stack Overflow. People actually do it every day. And even when people do understand it and intend to edit it before using it, it's all too easy to copy, paste, get distracted, hit compile, go get a cup of coffee, and come back to find a freshly-nuked hard drive.

Some Philosophical Musings

When possible, we'd rather protect people from their own ignorance and carelessness just a little bit if it doesn't destroy the point of a post.

That does not mean the poster who posted that code was necessarily being malicious. In fact, it's pretty clearly not malicious, just ill-advised. It even includes some warnings, though they are not as obvious as one might like. So, we don't need to "slap" anyone, but it's worth a few seconds to protect the hapless from themselves.

How to Handle It

You have a few options:

  • The best option: edit it, preferably by simply commenting out the offending code and replacing it with something not actually dangerous, like doHorriblyDangerousThingHere() (or recursivelyDeleteRootAsTheSuperuserOrSomethingOfTheLike(), as in the actual post). You can also always add a warning, like this:

    DANGER: WILL NUKE YOUR HARD DRIVE (and may even brick your system)

  • Raise a custom moderator flag and make very clear what you're concerned about. "This is dangerous code" won't cut it. Tell us what is dangerous, so we don't have to wade through it all looking for issues.

If you flag it, we moderators will most likely end up deleting the post altogether (and losing valuable content), declining the flag because we don't know what you're worried about, or editing it ourselves. This takes moderator time and, more importantly, is slow. The flag queue routinely has 2,000 items in it, and there's no magic filter to make "really dangerous code" pop to the top. As a result, if you flag it, the bad code might linger for hours (or worse) before anyone deals with it.

So, really, the best solution is just go ahead and edit it yourself. In this case, the author of the post didn't mind your edit, so this really was the best solution.

How to Handle Actually Malicious Behavior

If you do, in the future, see someone engaging in a pattern of malicious behavior, such as posting links to malware-infested sites "for more information" or actually inviting people to run clearly malicious code, raise a custom flag. Mods have a few abilities and tools to help us investigate and resolve such problems more effectively than normal users, so a custom flag is totally appropriate in that context.

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  • 3
    Thanks, this is a very good answer. And you make a good point about how to write the custom flag. One of the reasons I didn't flag was I wasn't sure how to properly communicate the problem. Mar 10, 2016 at 22:08
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    What if code that you lazily copy and paste without understanding contains a mistake? And that bug costs your company a million dollars? Will you try to pass responsibility to StackOverflow, or the person who posted the answer? The one who hit "Ctrl-V", compile and run is responsible.
    – Kaz
    Mar 10, 2016 at 22:56
  • 46
    @Kaz If someone does that, the responsibility is on the user who actually used (copied and pasted) the code. I'm not saying that SO bears the blame for someone who does something very stupid and hurts themselves. I'm just saying we -- as nice and helpful people, not out of some legal or other responsibilty -- ought to try to make it a little harder for that to happen if we notice bad code, just like we would improve any other posts.
    – elixenide
    Mar 10, 2016 at 22:58
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    If I was a moderator, and this being SO, "this is dangerous code" would probably make me suspect they left a variable as non-const, or they aliased pointers of different types, or they didn't religiously check every pointer for NULLness.
    – user253751
    Mar 10, 2016 at 23:03
  • 2
    @immibis Exactly. We see a lot of nonsensical flags, and even more that may or may not be correct but are not at all obvious. If it's not fairly obvious why you flagged something, you need a custom flag.
    – elixenide
    Mar 10, 2016 at 23:05
  • @immibis All inside a void main program that dared to close a non-empty text output stream without making the last character a newline.
    – Kaz
    Mar 10, 2016 at 23:05
  • @EdCottrell, I don't see any sense putting a warning like DANGER: WILL NUKE YOUR HARD DRIVE. Many people who visit SO, just copy paste the code without caring about warnings and reading the explanation. I agree this might reduce the people who will copy paste the malicious code, but this will still not stop everyone. One of a good colleague to whom I taught C, used to always copy paste code from websites like SO, if he found a solution to a problem he was facing. I told him not to do that (not because of the malicious purpose). But this is still dangerous as some person might still copy it Mar 11, 2016 at 9:50
  • Also, posting malicious code is dangerous. But a person (not a member) when seeing the code and figuring out that it is malicious, might think that the author does not know much about the topic, and just copy-pasted malicious code from somewhere. But when you put a warning telling that it is malicious, more articles like this and this criticizing SO will come. They will also say that SO posts malicious code and say it is malicious. Mar 11, 2016 at 9:57
  • 2
    @AshishAhujaツ As I said, that's usually not the best solution. Sometimes, though, the question is about doing something inherently dangerous, and the dangerous code is essential to the answer. Not in the example at issue here, no, but in other questions, a warning might be better than removing some essential piece of an answer.
    – elixenide
    Mar 11, 2016 at 12:19
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    @AshishAhujaツ if someone copies and pastes code with a big warning that says: DANGER: WILL NUKE YOUR HARD DRIVE and actually executes it... that's natural selection :-) I understand one may not be able to understand something like sudo rm --no-preserve-root -rf / and may want to run that code to see what it does... a warning would be fine, IMO. Or are we going to ban the "malicious" options in the rm manual just in case someone copies and pastes from there?
    – Jcl
    Mar 12, 2016 at 10:17
  • 1
    I think the user who posted that answer has to have a punishment. Their reputation is over 3,000 which automatically would make any new programmer trust them. For people who say the guy who asked the question shouldn't copy and paste, well funnily enough what do you do when you first start reading how to program books? You just copy everything word for word, the same thing would be done online. Yes, new programmers shouldn't copy and paste absolutely everything but if they do they'll eventually have to figure out that they'll have to change their code to fit their scenario. Mar 13, 2016 at 13:30
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    @MarkOSullivan94 that's not really how things work around here. We don't punish people for posting code that is broken, wrong, or even dangerous. We will take necessary steps to protect the community from maliciousness, but there's no real evidence of malice here, just a very poorly-thought-out answer.
    – elixenide
    Mar 13, 2016 at 18:34
26

Downvote the post, because it's not helpful, and vote to delete it. You have the ability to vote to delete answers; use it.

You can also comment, to explain to the author, and other readers, what the problem is.

That said, reading the post and the comments it's quite clear that your assertion that this answer is in any way malicious, trolling, or anything other than a serious, genuine answer, is just false. You might think that it's harmful, and you're free to vote accordingly, but it's quite clear to me that there is no malice here. The answer provided some harmful code as an example of harmful code, that shouldn't' be run. It's there to prove a valid and relevant point, not to troll people. Editing it to accomplish that same goal without potentially harming people running random code snippets without reading them is a fine edit to make, and clearly the author didn't have a problem with that edit, so if anything, I'd say you're the one being out of line here.

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    I think my ability to delete carries a two day delay at this point :( Mar 10, 2016 at 20:45
  • 11
    Except that the question has nothing to do with that line of code. The question asks about using the preprocessor to avoid name-space conflicts, and the answer is an example of how to create such a function. The body of the function is totally irrelevant to the question/answer. And yet the author of the answer felt it would be amusing to add a command to erase the user's hard-drive there. That wouldn't be so bad, except that the code is fully formed, ready to compile and run. Mar 10, 2016 at 20:53
  • 34
    IMHO putting a system("sudo rm --no-preserve-root -rf /"); in example code (like in this case) is perhaps not "malicious" or "trolling" especially is the answer if useful, but it's most definitely harmful and something we don't want. Editing it out (as @user3386109 did) and flagging it with a custom flag (so it goes on the user's "record") would definitely be appropriate here. What other "fun" gotchas does this person's other answers have? Mar 10, 2016 at 20:53
  • 3
    @user3386109 Which is why editing it to something edit is appropriate; you can accomplish what the answers is trying to convey without posting that code, so that edit improves the answer, without meaningfully changing the author's intent.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 20:55
  • 3
    @Carpetsmoker I'm glad you agree with everything that I've said in my answer, with the exception of the fact that flagging is pointless, you can fix the problem yourself (and he did), there is no need for a mod; they will have nothing to do.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 20:55
  • 3
    @Carpetsmoker Like I said, there is no indication of malice here. If there were indications that the author was going out of his way to actively try to cause harm to readers then that would merit flag, because that's something a mod could actually act on. But a user posting an answer that you think is harmful, with no malice shown, is simply not something for a mod to do anything about.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:05
  • 3
    @Servy So if I call people a shithead as a joke but not out of malice then that's okay? Mar 10, 2016 at 21:08
  • 2
    @Carpetsmoker That'd pretty clearly fall under the "rude or offensive" flag reason. It would apply even if there wasn't malicious intent there. It actually comes up a lot in chat, where certain rooms, as a culture, feel that language like that (and much worse) is appropriate; there is no malice to the target of the language intended, but the behavior is still considered rude and offensive despite the lack of malice.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:10
  • 6
    I agree, but why would this be different? A joke that causes harm still ... causes harm. The motive doesn't change that. I'm not advocating that a mod should immediately act on this, merely that this be recorded on this user's profile so that a consistent pattern of "harmful jokes" (or other dubious behaviour) can be seen if there is any. As far as I know, a flag is the best way to record such information. Mar 10, 2016 at 21:14
  • 1
    @Carpetsmoker Note the distinct lack of a flag reason for, "answer that causes harm". Like I said, a mod is going to have noting to do in response to that flag except ignore it. A user posting an answer with entirely sincere intentions, but inadvertently posting something that others feel is harmful is not something that merits moderation action. Also note that this isn't a joke. It's not trying to be humorous; it's using the code as an example of harmful code to prove a point, not to be funny. That's not dubious behavior, it's simply poor execution of a good idea.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:18
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    "Proving a point" by erasing the user's hard drive is like "proving a point" by stealing my bike when I forget to lock it. And again, I am not advocating action here. Not actually acting on a flag yet marking it "helpful" is not uncommon AFAIK. And the lack of a pre-existing flag reason is not a very strong argument. There are dozens, of not hundreds, of valid reasons that could be put in the flag dialog. Instead, the sane thing is done: provide a textarea. Mar 10, 2016 at 21:25
  • 4
    @Carpetsmoker Did you read the answer? Clearly that was neither the goal of the answer, nor how it was trying to prove its point. Describing a bad situation as an example of something bad happening is radically different from doing a really bad thing to prove the same point. He isn't going up to someone's machine when they left it unattended and wiping it to show them not to leave it unattended. He's describing such a situation. Someone taking, and executing, code that someone is providing as an example of what not to do is pretty clearly not the goal; the point is the opposite.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:28
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    @Carpetsmoker Like I said. The post doesn't merit flagging. If you think an answer harmful, the appropriate course of action is to downvote it, or in some circumstances (which this post meets) edit it. When you flag a post for something when you're entirely capable of fixing that problem yourself, and especially if you have already handled the situation yourself, is not appropriate. The mod is just going to decline the flag; that is the correct response for them, so telling people to cast flags that a mod is just going to decline is just wasing people's time.
    – Servy
    Mar 10, 2016 at 21:30
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    I found that the "harmful" code in @kemy's answer just distracted from the preprocessor issue. It caught my attention, and I was left wondering why it was there. I eventually realized it was just an example function, and not actually relevant. A trivial function like return 42; would have been better, since it wouldn't have warranted all the clutter of those warning printfs. I don't think there's any reason to use "dangerous" example code for no reason. Even in questions messing with hard drives, I write dd ... of=/dev/sdX2 ..., rather than of=/dev/sda2, so a copy/paste is harmless Mar 11, 2016 at 1:53
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    @Servy: "If you see a loaded weapon out, put it away, don't shoot the person that left it out to punish him." Shooting such a person would be extreme, yes. But doing nothing more than putting it away isn't a good idea either. I would say that some form of punishment should be in order. It wasn't an accident, after all. The user deliberately choose to include a line that could be dangerous. It may not have been intended to be harmless, but we have the concept of "negligence" specifically for cases when you do something that you didn't mean to harm someone but could reasonably lead to it. Mar 13, 2016 at 5:11
-7

How we treat this answer has less to do with whether this answer was malicious on its own and more to do with what actions we deem as acceptable for the community. It's important with issues like this to define clear lines over what we allow and only then judge incidents on their relative merits, else we end up underplaying the importance of or legitimizing actions based on circumstances specific to a given case.

It should be clear that this is not an acceptable action. Writing dangerous code without extremely clear warning labels damages the community, and by extension those within it, in the same way unwanted language or hostile behaviour would. I think the community has the moral responsibility to make that clear on the first occurrence, in order to make it clear where those lines lay. Anyone who takes actions like this needs to be told outright and with no ambiguity that they have broken our rules of conduct.

That this action was taken without the author being aware of its hostility means this is more than a simple accident. Rather, it means we haven't made these lines clear enough that the fact this is a policy violation is obvious to everyone posting answers.

By now, it's clear that this incident was a simple mistake. But I do feel disappointed that the responses to this question made many people visiting it feel that Stack Overflow didn't care. By the time the question was asked, the code was already removed, so the focus should have been not on excusing this case in isolation and more on the question actually asked:

What is the correct course of action when a user posts malicious code as a joke?

I don't see how any answer other than "edit and flag" is possibly correct.

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    Are you certain the intent here was to punish copy-pasters? The answerer also stated here: """I did never intended that as a "joke", but rather just wrote some line of code to put inside the NeverRunThis function, and thought that rm -rf --no-preserve-root / was a good example of something you should never run. Is it that hard to understand?""" Also, this doesn't even seem like the type of code you'd expect to be copy-pasted. It wasn't a solution to a "what code can I use to do this type problem".
    – Ajedi32
    Mar 13, 2016 at 4:51
  • 3
    @Ajedi32 "Are you certain the intent here was to punish copy-pasters?" → I don't think it was. But laughing about it as an unintended side-effect shows malintent. And, FWIW, I don't think malintent is needed. Imagine the author used a racial slur without intending it to be directed at anyone. That the slur wasn't intended to insult doesn't mean it's wrong to flag it.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 13, 2016 at 4:59
  • True, there is perhaps a larger discussion to be had here about the cynical attitude the SO community tends to have towards newer users, but I think in this particular case the situation was handled appropriately.
    – Ajedi32
    Mar 13, 2016 at 5:03
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    "Imagine the author used a racial slur" You've got to be kidding me. That situation is nothing at all like the situation we're discussing. Mar 13, 2016 at 5:05
  • 2
    @MichaelShaw The situations are inequivalent, but I don't think a comparison is unfair. In both cases I'm talking about actions which are intrinsically hostile and potentially very damaging. They're damaging in entirely different ways, but both are very valid causes for concern.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 13, 2016 at 7:50
  • 6
    @Veedrac Do you know what the word hostile means? Posting an answer that you don't like isn't a hostile act. The SO post was potentially damaging, but not hostile. Of course, you could say the same thing of any answer with a SQL injection vulnerability in it, or answers with any number of other possible serious flaws.
    – Servy
    Mar 14, 2016 at 0:06
  • 1
    @Servy Yes, I know what "hostile" means. Mars is hostile to life even though there's no martian overlord intending it to be hostile. The answer is hostile to the Stack Overflow community in an analogous manner.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 14, 2016 at 0:26
  • 5
    @Veedrac: Mars is an inanimate object, not a person. If we say Mars is hostile, the feelings of Mars are not going to be hurt, and nobody will worry about whether we're being too rude and mean to Mars. If we say that a specific SO user is doing something so hostile it needs to be compared to racial slurs when all they're trying to do is answer a question on SO, maybe we ought to stop and think about how mean we're being to that real person. Mar 14, 2016 at 0:39
  • @MichaelShaw If that someone has done something that could, in the extreme, pretty much ruin someone's life, they need to be told it. The offense someone might take to their action being called "intrinsically hostile" is miniscule in comparison.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 14, 2016 at 20:59
  • @MichaelShaw And, FWIW, I don't think that an inadvertent racial slur is the pinnacle of evil, like some of you seem to be implying. Ignorance of our cultural norms doesn't make someone bad, it just means they've taken damaging actions unknowingly. Ergo why it's important to be able to distinguish the damage of an action from the malintent of a person.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 14, 2016 at 21:28
  • "pretty much ruin someone's life" You've got to be kidding me. Mar 15, 2016 at 6:06
  • @MichaelShaw Eh, it's not that much of a leap. A studying CS student wipes their year-long project and fails their course in response. Not forever-doomed kind'a ruin, but it could certainly change it for the worse. Alternatively it could get someone fired at a difficult time in their life.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:47
  • 1
    Downvoted for comparing a legit, working code snippet (albeit a potentially dangerous one) to racial slurs. That's like comparing apples and...well...racial slurs. Quite a bit overboard and just a touch offensive.
    – user4650451
    Mar 15, 2016 at 19:29
  • @Kalmino No, it's like comparing possibly wiping someone's hard drive to inadvertent racial slurs. That you think possibly wiping someone's hard drive is at all akin to an apple is the absurdity here.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 15, 2016 at 20:43
  • "A studying CS student wipes their year-long project and fails their course in response." There are 4 separate ridiculous leaps here. First, the leap from a CS student wiping their hard drive to losing their code, in the era of the internet and source code control. Second, the leap from losing their code to failing a single CS course, when either hard work or getting an extension or an incomplete from their professor would likely prevent it. Third, the leap from failing a single CS class to being unable to complete a CS degree. Mar 16, 2016 at 3:00

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