The question is more: Why should it remain? I'd say that such characters serve no purpose in questions and should be removed instead, which already happens. This would make your bug report status-bydesign.
U+FEFF is a zero-width non-breaking space character when not doubling up as a byte-order mark when used as the first character of a document. A question body is not a whole document, and neither is a code block within a question.
Zero-width non-breaking spaces are not exactly visible, but can muck up the layout of a post, so removing them from posts has a purpose. It also removes the possibility to use the character to try and circumvent the minimum character requirements for a post.
Stack Exchange doesn't and cannot represent all data in literal form; tabs are expanded to spaces, newlines are normalised and HTML is escaped unless marked up as code, for example. As such, you'll always have to find ways to represent unprintable characters in other ways. Programming languages have various ways to represent non-printable characters, which would make such problems actually visible; in Python I'd use the repr()
function to produce a Python string literal for example:
>>> print repr(u"\ufeff")
u'\ufeff'
It is no coincidence that the output looks almost the same as my input to the repr()
function there.
You should find a similar representation for the Ruby question; how would you add a U+FEFF charater to a Ruby string literal, for example?