I've had this happen on a couple of my old answers using JSBin: I'd done up a quick example and linked to it like this: http://jsbin.com/iyucuy
(not marked up as a link on purpose, keep reading). At the time that was correct, but the way JSBin works, if you do a raw link like that, following it automatically redirects you to the most recent edit. Spammers figured that out and edited a bunch of bins for their nefarious purposes (that's what's happened to the link above). Also, people following the link and then modifying things for their own purposes inadvertently also make the SO link go the wrong place.
Linking instead to the original version (http://jsbin.com/iyucuy/1/) fixes it.
Could we do a wholescale, mass-edit doing something effectively like this (expressed in JavaScript just for the example);
postText = postText.replace(/(http:\/\/jsbin\.com\/[^/\s\r\n]+)\/?(?=[\s\r\n]|$)/g, '$1/1');
E.g., converting http://jsbin.com/identifier
or http://jsbin.com/identifier/
to http://jsbin.com/identifier/1
but leaving http://jsbin.com/identifier/2
, http://jsbin.com/identifier/43
, and such alone?
Unsurprisingly, a DSE query asking for a count of all such posts times out, but this ugly querythis ugly query suggests that I personally have over 500 unversioned JSBin links out there (if I haven't screwed the query up, my test data is in it as a comment), which is out of about 1500 JSBin links total in my posts. I'm an outlier, but still, I suspect we have a lot of these out there, and that a good portion of them are linking to nefarious websites.
Obviously such a bulk-update would need to be done carefully...
(Is this a feature-request? Pretty sure it's not support...)
(This is yet another reason Stack Snippets need some love from SE development. So people aren't tempted to use off-site resources like JSBin or jsFiddle that SE can't control. I always use snippets when they don't block features I need to show what I'm doing, but I've heard more than a couple of people say they were "so broken" that they just don't use them at all.)