Is there any information other than a password that would be considered a security threat?

I am primarily interested in knowing what could compromise the security of a server, rather than the security of intellectual property.

For example, it seems to me that it would be a security threat to include both my username and domain name.

If I post a large amount of output, it is not possible for me to know what nefarious uses it could be put to, especially if data were combined from across multiple posts.

EDIT:
Based on suggestions in comments below, I have moved this question to Server Fault.

EDIT2: Moderators at ServerFault migrated it to meta.serverfault ... but is that any better than here?

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Hm, this is actually a question about technology, even though you asked it because you wanted to be a better SO question-asker. Belongs on one of the technical sites, I'm not 100% sure which one. – Popular Demand Nov 16 '10 at 22:22
Based on Line 2 it belongs on ServerFault? – Peter Boughton Nov 16 '10 at 22:27
please don't write "[closed]" in your titles; that phrase has a very specific meaning on Stack Exchange sites, and your question is not actually closed yet. – Popular Demand Nov 16 '10 at 23:05
@Popular Sorry about that. – David Nov 16 '10 at 23:35
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closed as off topic by Popular Demand, ChrisF, waiwai933, Joel Coehoorn Nov 17 '10 at 18:00

Questions on Meta Stack Overflow are expected to generally relate to the Stack Exchange family of websites and/or community in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

1 Answer

You should include enough relevant information in the post to enable people to answer your question. You should exclude all irrelevant information. The hard part is knowing what's relevant and what's not. You can typically disguise user names and passwords (posting 'password' as the password is fine - assuming that isn't actually the password you really use); you can use example.com as the domain name (it is reserved by the IETF for that purpose). You should hide names of organizations and people hidden in paths and URLs if there's the slightest sensitivity about them.

As to the meta-meta-question of where this question belongs - I really don't see why it doesn't belong on meta.stackoverflow.com. The principles are much the same regardless; it is a perfectly good question.

It is getting far too hard to find 'the right site™' to post questions.

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