333

After stumbling upon both a question which mentioned "I did chmod 777"1 and an answer which recommended "do chmod 777" yesterday I did a basic search and found quite a few answers which recommend this practice—some with a disturbing amount of upvotes.

This is especially dangerous since many of these answers revolve around web development, and recommendations such as "you need to run chmod -R 777 /var/www/wordpress are not uncommon. I've had to clean up after an unwise chmod more than once, both through Stack Overflow answers, as well as outside of that.

Therefore I tried to fix this at least a little bit by leaving a comment on those answers. I felt that an edit would be inappropriate as it would change the meaning of the post too much (you can't always just change this to chmod 755; usually the solution is to set the user and/or group, depending on the OP's situation/problem). In addition, a comment would hopefully be seen by the author of the answer, who would hopefully be educated by it.

This is the sort of comment that should have been created when the answer was first posted, but for whatever reason wasn't.

Adding these comments was, apparently, not appreciated by at least some moderators. To quote:

You did just carpet-bomb [pun intended? probably not] our site with 154 comments in a very short amount of time. Please don't do that. If there is a wider technological issue like this, bring it to Meta first, so the community can help figure out a response.

And subsequently, these comments were deleted.2

Yes, 154 are quite a few comments. But Stack Overflow has a whopping 18.3 million answers, so on that scale, it's really not that much. And if a comment pointing out a mistake on one answers is appropriate, then why not on 154 answers with the same mistake?

Without going into too much detail on my feelings about having >2 hours of what I see as constructive and meaningful, yet boring and thankless, work undone at the press of a button, I am bringing this to meta as suggested: what should we do about this?

  • Leaving it be doesn't strike me as a very appealing option.

    • This sort of stuff is a lot more dangerous than, for example, the "malicious sudo rm -rf" on which there are currently two meta questions and a reddit thread. Instead of clobbering all your files, it's much more insidious and the consequences may go undetected for weeks, months, and even years.

    • It doesn't just harm whoever runs it; compromised machines send out spam, malware, etc. and may (and have!) cause data leaks.

    • In some scenarios it may indeed clobber a significant part of your files; an unwise rm -rf or malicious rm -rf by another user will now remove those files.

    • People read these Stack Overflow answers every day; even old ones. I see them being referenced in Stack Overflow questions mentioning "I did chmod 777 as recommended here".

    • The good folks at Server Fault have a more comprehensive list of why this is bad: Why is “chmod -R 777 /” destructive? (many of these issues also apply to chmod 777 in general, and not just /).

  • Editing also doesn't strike me as the best option, as it changes too much from the original intent, and doesn't (try to) educate the author about the mistake, but it's an option.

  • Adding a new answer doesn't "fix" anything. The answers will still be there. Upvoted. Accepted. Above my "good one". It will also not inform the author of the answer that they did something pretty silly.

  • Leaving a comment still strikes me as the best option, for the reasons outlined above: it doesn't change the meaning, it (tries to) educate the author, and it warns visitors. I should point out, that in the short time that the comments were there, a few of the authors replied with "Oops, sorry, I'll go fix it!" so they did have effect and were useful!



Footnotes

1 For those not familiar with Unix-y systems, this will give full read and write permissions to everyone on the system. A very bad idea. To be clear, there is practically never a reason to do this. Things like the /tmp directory are an exception, and even then you need to make sure you set the sticky bit to make it secure. In fact, /tmp and similar directories in combination with the sticky bit is the only valid use case I can think of; although I'm sure someone will point out another exceedingly rare use case in the comments soon.


2 To provide a brief clarification to @Shog9's response to this in his answer:

You obviously didn't read any of the answers you were commenting on, as evidenced by this same cookie-cutter comment left on answers that already urged readers not to use chmod 777

Which is not true. I did read all of those answers, and probably skipped more than commented on. Although it's entirely possible I misunderstood a few (it's not possible for me to go back and check since it's deleted).

I don't want to go on about these comments though − that's not really why posted this thread − what's done is done and move on. But Shog9's answer is, unfortunately, rather wrong on this...

47
  • 25
    Those moderators and their puns! Mar 13, 2016 at 12:16
  • 19
    You of course cannot "fix" such an answer without radically changing its intention. And "don't do that" is pretty useless if you don't give a better alternative. Properly stopping programmers from doing stoopid stuff is work, it cannot be dusted off with a bunch of comments. If you have time to post 154 comments then you also have time to post one good answer, that's how we do it here. Mar 13, 2016 at 12:59
  • 130
    @HansPassant "One good answer" is not a fix. The answers will still be there. Upvoted. Accepted. Above my "good one". It will also not inform the author of the answer that they did something really silly. In addition, I should point out, that in the short time that the comments were there, a few people replied with "Oops, sorry, I'll go fix it!" so they did have effect!
    – anon
    Mar 13, 2016 at 13:02
  • 17
    Comments are fungible, and not all comments can be visible at first. Let the moderators/high-rep users edit the answers and put a prominent caveat at the top of the post. This is a security issue, and SO shouldn't be seen as a supplier of bad advice (TM). Mar 13, 2016 at 14:47
  • 21
    I guess the moral is 'do a few each day for lots of days', rather than 154 all at once. I don't think this was a good moderation decision…but I'm not a moderator, so I don't know which rules were broken that warranted bulk undo. It seems counter-productive to remove improvements to the site. Mar 14, 2016 at 5:21
  • 85
    Have you tried changing permissions to the answers so that they're writeable by everyone? Mar 14, 2016 at 5:44
  • 19
    @Cerbrus The answerers get a comment notification and absolutely DO read them. The idea was for the authors to fix their answers, not only as a warning to readers.
    – DBedrenko
    Mar 15, 2016 at 13:54
  • 12
    @Cerbrus So the situation got at least 25% better. And what harm did it do? None as far as I can see...
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:15
  • 12
    @vove: even as a trouble-shooting measure, chmod 777 is downright dangerous. No, it is not good advice ever. It may be convenient, but it isn't good. And people here are not all experienced enough to recognize that there is danger. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:25
  • 9
    Even professionals were clueless n00bs once. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:26
  • 11
    @Cerbrus How exactly does not giving out incredibly bad and irresponsible advice lead to a lowering to standards?
    – biziclop
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:40
  • 10
    @vove: With all due respect, that is not reasonable. People coming to SO are often working in unfamiliar territory, trying to resolve a problem outside their regular knowledge domains, in a hurry, under stress, without time to read or access to 'Linux for Dummies'. Having bad advice on the site is not sensible. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:41
  • 9
    @vove You say "RTFM", but I've seen many installation manuals recommending chmod 777 (I used to collect examples on rwxrwxrwx.net until I got bored of it). Yeah, usually crappy PHP crap (the usual...), but people read it and it sticks. And while we can't fix all of the world, we can fix our tiny corner, at least a little bit. A small improvement is sill ... an improvement...
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:43
  • 9
    @Cerbrus On whether it's a waste of time, I think we will have to agree to disagree. However, it is my time to waste, and so far, no one has put forth a good argument how this would make matters worse ...
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:51
  • 7
    @DavidS Shog9's revised answer is even more wrong, as his claim that I "did not read any of the answers" is flat-out wrong. I read every single one of them, and may have made a few mistakes there (I can't check now), but I most certainly didn't just add a comment to every answer which mentioned "chmod 777" as is implied.
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 4:13

8 Answers 8

98

Given the user's story, I believe the moderator did the wrong thing in this case.

Leaving 154 helpful comments is doing a great service to our community. Doing it in a short amount of time is efficient and productive.

I can think of a couple of topics on which I've left scores of comments that say basically the same thing. But I've done it over time, and somewhat haphazardly. I did nothing wrong in this, but it's taken me longer, and I have only helped those I happened to stumble across. Does the fact that I was inefficient about it somehow make it okay?

Of course, spamming the site with unhelpful comments is bad. And since the system can't tell the difference between helpful and unhelpful comments, there might be alarms that go off whenever anyone spams the site with comments. If there are, I presume it's so that human intelligence can be brought to bear, not to invite a human to implement a reflexive and destructive response.

Life is full of situations where human judgment provides the best outcome. Not everything is algorithmic and rule-bound. According to the user, he or she proceeded carefully, case-by-case, and this flurry of activity should have been given the same consideration.

4
  • 6
    definitely +1. We should just go and fix the offending content instead of beating around the bush. Mar 15, 2016 at 16:50
  • 16
    Agreed - I'm a bit peeved that the official response is that they should have 'done it right, not fast' which is exactly what the moderator did not do - rather than contact Carpetsmoker and/or delete the few bad comments, they decided to nuke it all. Not to mention the response that Carpetsmoker should have completely fixed all the answers entirely rather than making small steps towards the goal.
    – Rob Mod
    Mar 16, 2016 at 4:47
  • 1
    Looking at the discussion on Shog's post, a lot of those comments were out of place on the answers. IE: Noise. Spamming comments or edits is never a good idea.
    – Cerbrus
    Mar 16, 2016 at 7:59
  • I've also gotten my answers removed even though they were important to place in many questions.
    – Jonathan
    Sep 21, 2016 at 1:22
20

The real problem here is not being addressed as far as I can see, which is: votes don't indicate post quality.

You can't blame someone for posting a shotgun-approach answer like "Do a chmod 777, it fixes all permission issues". The same happens for Windows Services ("Just run it as Local System [i.e. administrator]").

You can't blame such posters for not knowing better. You can't blame later visitors from believing that that answer, still being on the site with a positive score, is supposedly something good, nor can you blame them for upvoting it because it solved their problem, keeping the answer on the top.

Yes, it is intensely stupid to copy-paste anything off the web and run that on any machine, but that's just how the world works: people are going to do that. We can't put disclaimers on every post.

The real problem is that crap isn't downvoted.

8
  • There is many problems with the site and none of them being addressed since trivial stuff is more important :'(
    – user4029967
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:57
  • 1
    @vove It is a sad state of events, but likely true. I can see problems with enough information to answer getting harangued for not being in the correct format. I see people with little reputation being snotty in rule application to the top 0.5% in all time contribution. StackOverflow hopes that popularity and truth align, but they only do so when the answers don't depend on popular but wildly dangerous answers. Brings to mind all the "turn off selinux" answers to all the "I got a selinux warning" questions (or older yet, the "turn off the firewall" answers to fix network connections)
    – Edwin Buck
    Mar 15, 2016 at 18:21
  • 3
    Agreed. Downvoting the answer is in the vein of this site and the spirit of not enabling low quality answers. Unfortunately, the single downvote that you're able to apply when you come across such an answer may not make a dent in the substantial upvotes that the answer may have, as you mention. Mar 15, 2016 at 18:25
  • What are your thoughts on organizing people to try to shift the tide, so to speak, by pouring on downvotes and maybe upvoting an alternative answer?
    – jpmc26
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:27
  • 1
    @jpmc26 everyone's vote is equal, so that doesn't work unless you really organise the voters - and I don't like mob voting. Also, there are more people looking for the copy-pasteable quick-fix than there are people who are willing to thoroughly review, test and criticize answers, which in general is reflected by the votes, especially on answers. I also don't really think applying a banner to such answers is a great idea either; who gets to decide which banners to place, who will review that and where to draw the line of which principles are too bad a practice to warrant such a banner?
    – CodeCaster
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:32
  • @CodeCaster There is no need to comment on the banners. I deleted my answer.
    – jpmc26
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:34
  • @jpmc26 I didn't mean your answer in particular, and it's been suggested before (in the context of SQL injection).
    – CodeCaster
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:35
  • 1
    It's not just the votes. In my experience, people rarely ever look past the answer with the accept mark, and the only person capable of controlling the accept mark (and thus, the first answer displayed), is the original asker. Who, in many cases, is the noob who doesn't know a good solution from a working solution, and will accept whatever he used to solve the problem. I think that there's room for improvement there (say, N gold badge holders able to vote change an accept mark on an old question). The details need to be ironed out, but I feel like that's a good direction to go to. Mar 22, 2016 at 12:38
13

FWIW, I have to agree the moderator did SO a disservice if he deleted 154 helpful comments merely because they all arrived at once.

I don't agree with the warning label jpmc26 suggests. It is nebulous, and the hair-on-fire ServerFault answer it references is basically wrong: the consequences it describes flow from 1) having root privilege and 2) using chmod -R 777 /. An organization that grants root privilege to someone who doesn't understand what that command does deserves what's coming to it. I believe it's called a teachable moment.

While perhaps inappropriate, setting a single file, or all files in a single directory, to mode 777 isn't nearly so deleterious as plonking the whole system. That's doubly true if the user owns the files. And mode 777 can be a useful debugging technique, if only to demonstrate that permissions are not the problem. Haven't we all done that at some point?

A better answer would guide the reader in a productive direction. Permission problems often mean the uid (or sometimes gid) that owns the process does not have appropriate permissions on the file. Sometimes, a directory in the pathname is the culprit; troubleshooting can be complicated by the use of symbolic links because the effective pathname isn't obvious. When the documentation is unclear, ambiguous, inaccurate, or missing -- that never happens, right? -- chmod won't be used on the file the application is trying to open. strace is a great tool for discovering what pathname was used.

To boil it down, a better warning might say:

  • Mode 777 is rarely the right choice because it defeats security considerations that the application and the system depend on.
  • Make sure you know what uid and gid own the affected process, and by what permissions -- via user, group, or other -- the process is supposed to be able to open the file.
  • You might use mode 777 temporarily to determine if file permissions are actually the problem. Do so carefully, in such a way that you can restore the original permissions.
  • Ensure the uid/gid of the process opening the file matches that of the file. World-read privilege is often used for static, nonsensitive information, such as documentation. World-write privilege is rare.
  • Remember that privilege is checked in order of uid, gid, other. If, for example, the file and process have the same uid, that is the controlling permission, regardless of gid or other. Wider grants do not override a narrower denial.
  • Ensure the uid/gid of the process has execute privilege on each directory in the path to the file. Follow any symbolic links used.
  • Verify that the file that "can't be opened" is the one the application is opening, and not another by the same name in a different directory. strace(1) will show the name of each file opened.
9

I am writing to support jmpc26's answer. It is rather meant as a comment, but there is not enough place, and no pictures are possible.

In the German Wikipedia, there are such hints for instance for medical and legal subjects. They are signals for readers that they must be careful in the application of the written text, and it is IMHO also some nonwarranty clause for Wikipedia.

See the hint for medical subjects: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angina enter image description here Rough translation: "This article is about health. It is not meant to be used for medical self-testing, nor can it replace the consultation of a professional medic. Please read the hints for health subjects."

Here the hint for legal subjects: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absonderungsrecht enter image description here Rough translation: "Please consider our hints about legal subjects!"

In answer to g00glen00b's comment: yes, those marks should be set on eval too. If they were not too heavy in the layout yet alerting enough, they'd be useful. Here on meta, there is also a known discussion about questions that are suspicious for trying to find out how to abuse a system.

19
  • 17
    You mean SO should have a disclaimer of the sort: "This site may contain malicious code, don't use if you are not sure what you are doing. In doubt ask a professional. Upvotes are not a reliable guarantee of correctness." Mar 14, 2016 at 8:17
  • 6
    eval isn't that dangerous. Doing things with untrusted user input is dangerous. eval() is just one example. This applies to many things: database access (SQL injections), file paths (../../../../../etc/passwd), usernames (faking other users using clever Unicode), XSS (My username is <script>...), etc. etc. etc. Yes, many things can be used dangerously, but this is a very specific and objectively dangerous thing to do that is unfortunately also something of a "meme" in the original sense of the word. We can't fix the world; we can just try to fix the worst of it.
    – anon
    Mar 14, 2016 at 8:20
  • @Trilarion, I'm not sure about how SO must disclaim, e.g. from the angle of a lawyer. But, if I see recommendation of chmod 777 or an (-> Carpetsmoker) unreflected usage of eval, then yes, such a disclaimer is a good thing. Mar 14, 2016 at 8:22
  • @Carpetsmoker, thank you. To me, your suggestion contains what could be written in disclaimers :-) "Be aware that by usage of eval(), you are opening doors for software attacks ..." To trigger that such a disclaimer is read and consumed, or, where to put the warning mark, eval() is the right place. Mar 14, 2016 at 8:26
  • 1
    This warning applies to StackOverflow as a whole, not just specific cases. You should not just copy-paste code blindly, never, whether or not they contain chmod 777 or eval() or ... shouldn't matter. Mar 14, 2016 at 9:40
  • 4
    @g00glen00b: Clearly the solution to blind copy-paste is for all code blocks to be presented to viewers as images, not text. As a side benefit, the whole question of which license to use for code will become moot. Of course, we will then have the problem of blind transcribers instead of blind copy-paste, but hey, you can't win them all.
    – Ben Voigt
    Mar 15, 2016 at 5:17
  • 2
    This seems like it'd be ripe for abuse and trigger edit wars. Medicine and law have external legal requirements around giving advice, and these banners basically just say "This is opinion. Talk to a professional." The problem is that on SO, we are the professionals and there aren't any external legal guidelines to use when determining whether a banner should be displayed or not. eval has appropriate uses - that's why it was created. Every technical decision must balance risk and reward, and every professional is going to balance them differently based on circumstances.
    – JDB
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:05
  • 1
    @JDB, thx for your contribution. Hopefully writers on Wikipedia very often are professionals. To me, the banners are not about the quality of the authors, but about the meaning of the text. On the other hand, may I ask if absolutely all people on Stack Overflow are experts? -- There are lots of little warning plates in the world: "Caution, stage" yet no law forces people to do so. -- To me, all this is much more about establishing a constructive and careful style of communication than about forcing and prohibiting. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:32
  • 2
    @BenVoigt that also applies to adding a warning, you'll always have blind warning-ignorant cop-pastes. You'll always have that kind of species, trying to fix it with a warning solves nothing in my opinion. In contrary, it makes it messy, because in my opinion chmod 777 is not a standalone case. Applying these warnings to all these posts is an impossible job, and adding it only to a few of those posts won't make a difference either. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:54
  • @peter_the_oak - The real problem is: "Who has the authority to hang the sign, or mandate that the sign be hung?" In all your examples, there is a clear authority (government, building owner). On SO, not so much. And wikipedia is a very different scenario. It's one thing to say "citation needed", which makes no judgment on the validity, truth or wisdom of a statement. It's another thing entirely to say "don't do what the author just said to do" (which is how many will interpret such a banner).
    – JDB
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:04
  • @peter_the_oak - To answer your first question though... it's the case moreso on SO then elsewhere (in my ignorant opinion) that the people reading answers on this are themselves the "professional" within their context. Unlike me reading medical advice that I can then take to my doctor, users here typically have no one to take advice to. They are typically building out solutions themselves, so "talk to a professional before acting on this" is simply impractical.
    – JDB
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:15
  • You may wish to edit your answer. In light of Shog's advice, I've deleted mine. I don't want to be guilty of the very thing we're discussing here: highly upvoted answers that are bad advice.
    – jpmc26
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:25
  • @jpmc26 - By deleting you did the wrong thing. Your answer was sound. Please, please undelete it. Mar 16, 2016 at 6:48
  • @DeerHunter SO may be a community, but it's a managed one. If it's not something the people who own and run SO want us doing, I don't want to advise people to do it. Given that they've done more for people across the world than I would ever dare hope I could, I'll defer to their judgement. =)
    – jpmc26
    Mar 16, 2016 at 6:54
  • 1
    @DeerHunter I disagree with the description of "bulling", but this is not fine by me and I've voted to undelete. I feel like the community is finally becoming more aware of the importance of responsibly addressing security concerns. The votes on jpmc26's post were a useful visible expression of that, and I'd like it restored. We won't convince Stack Exchange Inc., or continue to convince more of the community, if we just give up. (More broadly, the negligence in our industry is becoming a greater and greater risk to the public at large, and we have an obligation to get our act together.)
    – Jeremy
    Mar 16, 2016 at 17:30
-3

At your place I would edit in the first place, as you did. But if the author doesn't correct it in few days, I would edit in some huge (probably red) warning, including some basic reason why it's a bad idea and a link to some more detailed reasoning on it.

Well, I probably wouldn't do it, because I'm not (quite) a high-rep user like you and I wouldn't like to bother all those who do the suggested edits reviews, but that's nothing to stop you.

2
  • 1
    "I would sign it with my nick" The name and usercard of an editor to an answer they do not own is already attached to the answer. Such a signature is not necessary.
    – BoltClock
    Mar 16, 2016 at 8:12
  • @BoltClock: didn't know that, edited now.
    – Pavel V.
    Mar 16, 2016 at 8:14
-20

First of all I think administration should really look into it as it is clear this topic started many controversies. So, should we babyproof the boards or not?

I think the answer is way simpler than it seems:

  1. Is stackoverflow.com meant to be used by professionals? If yes then no warnings needed.
  2. Is stackoverflow.com meant to be used by everyone (including people who just started learning to program)? If yes then implement the warnings for everything.

Personally I would love to see in the end that the boards are mainly targeted at professional use. If there is a need to post a warning notice on everything so noone puts himself in danger maybe we should do that to save innocent lives...

Hard topic because it isn't easy to determine what is considered obvious and what not. In my opinion after finishing any IT school one should have certain level of knowledge. Now for me that knowledge might be basics, but for a person working in the field for some time problems I struggle with might be basics. Seems that another question to answer would be 'when I can consider myself a professional?'

So, stack for pros or free for all? If users want to implement the warnings though, in my opinion it would be better to implement basic knowledge in kind of some 'READ THIS BEFORE YOU DO ANYTHING ON THIS SITE' faq or something similar.

6
  • 4
    You mean like in the tour, which I'm not convinced people actually read.
    – ryanyuyu
    Mar 15, 2016 at 20:51
  • Exactly, sometimes I check who has the badge for that and you would be surprised.
    – user4029967
    Mar 15, 2016 at 20:57
  • 14
    Even as professionals there are things that individuals don't know. I work on a Unix-y system, so I have an idea that chmod 777 is dodgy. But suppose I had a problem with a Windows machine, which I know next to nothing about, and found equivalent advice in an answer, with bunch of upvotes. Still, I'm paranoid and suspicious enough to double-check, so then I find there's dozens of other upvoted answers saying the same thing. Now what? A whole bunch of people have vouched for this information, but the picture is incomplete, or they were flat-out wrong.
    – jscs
    Mar 15, 2016 at 20:59
  • Use the common sense I guess. Does it look safe? Do you know what you are about to do? Thinking before doing something instead of following "monkey sees monkey does" ideology could be a real lifesaver. Even when you are at the learning level.
    – user4029967
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:03
  • 6
    @vove Hardly. There are plenty of exploits which require deep understanding of the system and would completely fail the naive 'common sense' check. To ignore what others say and do what you 'think' is best is just as dangerous
    – Rob Mod
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:51
  • I doubt exploits you have in mind compare to setting chmod 777 or running windows os as an admin instead of working from user account. You just disagree to disagree. Every pro argument I read here makes no sense (common sense, washing machine, people not using linux, seriously, wth is wrong with you?). You also failed to understand my point in here, but yeah, let's stick to that mumbo jumbo and start proofing the boards, so some kids hosting apps on local (!!) don't put their system at risk of being vulnerable. Only thing I can say is I am deeply disappointed with the approach to these boards.
    – user4029967
    Mar 16, 2016 at 13:00
-20

Spam: always a bad choice

I'm adding a short note here, because folks have indicated in the comments that they're confused by the slightly disparaging remark I made about these comments in my closing. That's usually a sign that I've been less than candid. So let's be crystal clear about something:

You just spammed scores of people on Stack Overflow with this crap. You obviously didn't read any of the answers you were commenting on, as evidenced by this same cookie-cutter comment left on answers that already urged readers not to use chmod 777, answers to questions where the only viable answer was chmod 777, and answers that were so poorly written and received no one in their right mind would skip past the legible, upvoted, accepted answers to read them. You just did a simple keyword search and blasted these out, in the hope that they would magically make things better. That's abuse, and you're lucky the moderator who found them was kind enough to just delete them.

Now...

The right way

(you can't always just change this to chmod 755; usually the solution is to set the user and/or group, depending on the OP's situation/problem)

So, do that then. If the solution that folks are looking for requires an understanding of the specific problem being solved, then that's what you'll have to give them if you want to dissuade them from chmod 777. Which kinda rules out a uniform fix that can be slapped onto hundreds of posts without regard to context. Catharsis lost.

But that's what needs to happen: either edits, or alternate answers. A generic comment (that might not even be picked up by folks quoting or scraping the post) doesn't do anything to stand in the way of folks looking for a quick fix. The path of least resistance remains chmod 777.

So if you're serious about this - if you honestly believe it's a problem that needs to be solved - then organize a campaign to fix it. Identify problematic answers, compile a list of valid solutions, and provide them via edits or answers as your conscience allows.

OTOH, if you're not serious, then do nothing. That's easier for you and the moderators who had to clean up after you.

38
  • 23
    Re: "...had to clean up after you". It seems to me the OP's comments were helpful contributions to the site and therefore required no cleaning up, even if they weren't as good an option as posting his own answers. Even if he had posted his own answer, a comment to alert the author of the dangerous answer would probably be in order as well anyway.
    – Ergwun
    Mar 15, 2016 at 23:10
  • 10
    @Shog9 do you mean we should stop all comments about bad practices (i.e. SQL injection, storing passwords in DBs)? I probably made 100+ of those so far - sounds like it was a mistake. Mar 15, 2016 at 23:42
  • 15
    the moderators who had to clean up after you c'mon, "clean up"? really? That implies that something harmful was done. Is this harmful? You may feel like this is a useless exercise and that I'm pissing in the wind − fine; we can disagree on that. You could also say that going to meta first would have been a better option − and you would be right. Sorry :-( But "clean up" :-/ You know, that comment, combined with some others in the TL, makes me extremely unmotivated to spend any time fixing crap on SO because as soon as mod decides it's not required you get this sort of crap slung at you..
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 2:53
  • 6
    You posted about 140 of the same comment in about 90 minutes, @Carpetsmoker. I estimate about one every 40 seconds. So I should either be impressed by your ability to read and comprehend so quickly, or dismayed that you didn't try to get closer to the minimum rate-limit when scripting these.
    – Shog9
    Mar 16, 2016 at 2:59
  • 4
    Anyway, the problem with just blindly doing this is that you end up adding a lot of noise for little or no gain. That comment got slapped on answers that weren't about web-dev, answers that weren't problematic, answers that weren't upvoted or even formatted well enough to be understood... It was essentially spam: massive numbers of messages in the hope of hitting a few targets. Why would that ever be appropriate?
    – Shog9
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:16
  • 3
    And my answer will then sit there as the sixth answer ... Mostly unviewed ... This particular answer might get some love and upvotes on account of being mentioned here, but that's an exception. How is that more useful than a comment below the top answer? That seems much more visible to me... And how how of these answers should be posted? 25? 50? 100? 150?
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:18
  • 3
    So you got about a hundred thousand people a year looking for instructions on making a whole directory tree world-everything, @Carpetsmoker. You'd think this would be the motherlode of chmod 777 questions, the White Whale to your Ahab, the Mecca to your Mohammedan. And your solution is... A repetitious comment? This is Carnegie Hall, brother - no holding back, give it everything you got 'cause if you don't make a difference here you've failed more people than will ever see most of your other comments.
    – Shog9
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:25
  • 23
    Shog9, you forgot to explain how commenting is worse than doing nothing at all.
    – DavidS
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:42
  • 4
    Okay; so to be clear and avoid confusion: if I edit a whole bunch of answers and add a whole bunch of new answers, that is fine and not considered spam?
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 3:44
  • 12
    "You obviously didn't read any of the answers you were commenting on, as evidenced by this same cookie-cutter comment left on answers that already urged readers not to use chmod 777" -> No, that's not true. I did read every answer, I think skipped more answers than I commented on. Although it's of course entirely possible that I may have misunderstood a few (I can't go back and verify). "answers to questions where the only viable answer was chmod 777" -> I can't really think of a situation where this is the case to be honest...
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 4:09
  • 6
    @Cerbrus It was more like two hours according to my browser's logs, and I viewed about 260 questions; which leaves us with about 45s per question on average, which perhaps doesn't sound like a lot, but is plenty of time to judge the context of a command. Perhaps more importantly, I am quite surprised that now only am I made out to be an abuser and generic asshole over this, but apparently also a liar. :-/ Great. I'll try and help out again...
    – anon
    Mar 16, 2016 at 8:22
  • 10
    @Cerbrus It seems odd that people are claiming that a couple of posts per minute is too fast, when Stack Overflow moderators are frequently going through the flag queue at the rate. Deep analysis of these posts is not required; this could easily be in line with our (imperfect) standards of moderation accuracy.
    – Jeremy
    Mar 16, 2016 at 17:20
  • 4
    Sure. But from Carpetsmoker's post it sounded like he was simply skipping over the more ambiguous cases, much as the moderators would. That sounded good to me. However I haven't looked too closely at his actual actions, so I could be mistaken. (More broadly, I encourage action like this, even with some errors, because large-scale full-quality cleanup of posts like this is probably impractical, and letting so many potentially-dangerous posts remain untouched is somewhat irresponsible. But that's getting away from my original comment.)
    – Jeremy
    Mar 16, 2016 at 20:55
  • 13
    Personally I find the OP's claim credible that ~150 comments is a tiny fraction of the site, and the "I want to help" concern they were delivered under, seems valid to me. It would have been more correct to take it to meta first, but I personally would not go to war over 150 comments on what is quite plainly a dangerous recommendation even in the best of situations. Mar 18, 2016 at 6:38
  • 4
    150 comments is tiny, @Jeff. 150 comments in < 2 hours was the concerning part here.
    – Shog9
    Mar 18, 2016 at 17:07
-39

You're wasting your time trying to solve a non-problem. Anyone who comes across a "run chmod 777" answer falls into one of three groups:

  • people like you and me, who know what it does and what the potentially harmful consequences are, and will never use it
  • people who don't know or understand what it does, but will do some research to determine if it's the best solution, find out it has the drawbacks mentioned, conclude that it's a poor solution, and never use it
  • people who don't know or understand what it does and don't care to find out because they just want their s**t to work

The first two groups aren't affected. The third group is, but:

  • it's not the responsibility of Stack Overflow and its answerers to do due diligence for users
  • they don't care about the dangers, or the right way, or any of that important stuff. They sure as hell aren't going to read a comment telling them not to do that, or a warning in a post's body. The only thing you're achieving by trying to help such help vampires, is a waste of your (and in this case, moderators') time.

The only thing you, as a responsible Stack Overflow user, can and should do is downvote chmod 777 answers - but only when there are better alternatives available.

28
  • 6
    "They sure as hell aren't going to read a comment telling them not to do that, or a warning in a post's body". This, tenfold. Excellent answer.
    – Cerbrus
    Mar 14, 2016 at 12:05
  • 49
    These comments weren't just intended for the readership, they're also intended for the author, several of whom have now fixed their posts! I have seen several people repeat this "advice" on more than one question. And no, I also don't think that people "who don't know or understand what it does" somehow "don't care". Some, sure. But I feel that that most do care, but just don't understand it. The best solution to that is to try and educate them, not throw our hands in the air and shout "whatever, they're just idiots".
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 1:21
  • 4
    @IanKemp There were about five people who responded in total (but I'd have to check to be sure). It's about 4% which is not very large, but most comments were deleted fairly quickly and were probably unseen. I don't really agree with with your observation that I am "trying to teach men who don't want to fish". For some this is true, sure. But i don't think this applies to most of these people... I am less cynical and more hopeful than you on this point I guess...
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 7:42
  • 2
    And it seems that five was correct, at least those that I can trace because the response comments aren't deleted: answer fixed, now-removed comment said that "777 is not a security issue" (wtf?!), fixed answer, fixed answer (I saw four or five "chmod 777" answer from this person btw, not sure if they're all fixed), educated on a question
    – anon
    Mar 15, 2016 at 7:48
  • 4
    I think that you're missing the point. Someone reading an answer will likely assume that the solution has no drawbacks unless they are specifically mentioned!
    – Troyseph
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:23
  • 1
    @Troyseph There's an old saying about assumptions and what they make of you and me. Don't assume, check. Don't think, know.
    – Ian Kemp
    Mar 15, 2016 at 14:35
  • 15
    for me, many years ago, chmod 777 was that command that you run when apache doesn't let you upload files in wordpress. then I learned that chmod 755 was better, and why, and what could happen when you run 777. in both instances I was just looking for a solution to my problem, clicking through the internet at breakneck speed, copypasting code to run to see if it would help, because I need a goddam fix RIGHT NOW. I'm the third, second and first group all in one, at different times... but I never didn't care. a notice about the dangers would have helped me learn faster. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:36
  • 6
    "people like you and me" are those who know about unix style permissions, the other two groups are those who don't.... that's knowledge, not some innate inability or unwillingness to learn. lets help those that don't know by sharing what we do. Mar 15, 2016 at 14:41
  • 2
    I've seen a lot of missing the point on Meta, but this takes the cake, so let me put it simply: if you are stupid enough to run code off the internet without finding out what it does first, you deserve whatever happens to you. That is all.
    – Ian Kemp
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:30
  • 1
    Your answer should be the accepted one.
    – user4029967
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:37
  • 6
    I wonder if you have taken every piece of advice on the Internet in this manner. When you last Googled for a reason why your computer/car/washing machine wasn't working and someone said "You need to calibrate your flux capacitor by pressing the rest button three times", did you go off and figure out what that actually did? And have you done that every time you found an answer online? We have a responsibility to be the guardians of truth as well of good practice here, not just leave people to their own (potentially) well intentioned actions.
    – DavidG
    Mar 15, 2016 at 16:03
  • 2
    @IanKemp In a similar thought process, you could argue that taking random advice from anywhere online without knowing the underlying reasons is a dumb idea. Let's say I'm looking for a way to clean a stain in my carpet, so I look up some solutions. One such "answer" is to mix some bleach with ammonia. If the site looks reputable and it's one of the first few Google results, why would I have any reason to doubt the validity of the answer? So I go ahead, mix the two together, and fall over dead thanks to the toxic vapors created by the chemical reaction. Are you seriously telling me that
    – Mage Xy
    Mar 15, 2016 at 16:57
  • 2
    (continued) I deserved to die because I didn't happen to know that specific combination of liquids would kill me? If someone had warned me ahead of time, I might have either avoided that solution altogether or (if I'm really desperate) at least taken some precautions like a gas mask. How am I supposed to learn without being given an opportunity to do so?
    – Mage Xy
    Mar 15, 2016 at 16:57
  • 2
    @vove: It's not a bad example. It's the exact same situation, albeit with the consequences applied to a living person instead of a web server. My point is, how would I know if I'm putting myself in danger in the first place if I've never seen this information before? You seem to be under the impression that good security practices are de facto knowledge that everyone has, but that's simply not the case.
    – Mage Xy
    Mar 15, 2016 at 19:54
  • 2
    @IanKemp we aren't here to punish stupidity. we are on SO to learn, and to help others learn. leaving this kind of dangerous (and on the face of it, accepted by the community) advice in answers without a forewarning of some sort is tantamount to leaving sharp knives lying on the floor for children to find. Then calling the child stupid for picking them up and trying to figure out what they can use them for. It's great that you know all this stuff, but others dont - please don't call others stupid for trying solutions that were found here, posted by users like you and me. Mar 16, 2016 at 9:35

You must log in to answer this question.