I've seen this many times before, but it came up again today. Someone supposedly concerned with testing their site for vulnerability posts a link and requests to be "hacked".
In the true vein of security and paranoia, we have no proof that OP actually owns the site, and no legitimate agreement with the actual site owner that it's "OK" to attack the site.
This could be seen as a feeble attempt at ruining a competitor site. Even if all you see is "lorem ipsum" text and you know the site is not live, it could certainly be an site in production that belongs to some one OP recently had an argument with, for example.
Even if the site definitely belongs to OP, and we have written "consent" in the form of a Stack Overflow post, is it possible that someone could still get in trouble with the law for attempting to "hack" the site if OP decided to be a bastard about it?
It's probably safe to assume that these questions are always worthless and will get closed, but should these posts be flagged with extreme prejudice? I don't know what the law is, and I don't think it's worth even getting into. If this was my show, the user would get one friendly warning email and then a permanent ban.
What do the mods/community think about this?
