On Stack Overflow, one user asks to help him violating Youtube's Terms of Service.
This question should be closed.
Based on which criteria can I flag it?
On Stack Overflow, one user asks to help him violating Youtube's Terms of Service.
This question should be closed.
Based on which criteria can I flag it?
This particular question is "Too Broad". It's asking how to do something, and doesn't even show an attempt at thinking about a solution. Let alone a Minimal, Complete, Verifiable Example.
In general, if a post is asking for things that are blatantly illegal, or for things that could hurt other people, you can use a custom moderator flag and explain the situation.
Asking for help with violating the TOS of another site... it's not something we encourage, but it's not always off-topic. Such questions can also be useful to white-hats defending those sites. Each of these questions needs to be judged on their own merit.
(If your moral compass says "THIS IS BAD!!", use a custom moderator flag.)
Copying a moderator's relevant comment into the answer for visibility:
Moderators generally do not accept flags alleging a post might be asking something illegal or violating the terms of service of another site, etc.. We are not legal arbiters, nor do we judge posts based on moral compasses.
We would probably need a legal expert to decide whether the existence of a third-party's Terms of Service has the power to bind anyone who uses that service. Moreover, we would need a legal view of that from country to country, since this judgement is likely to vary from one jurisdiction to another. We might also need someone to decide if the advocation of a ToS violation would harm Stack Overflow by virtue of their hosting it.
So, as you can see, it is rather complex, and since we are not lawyers, we should do this as little as possible. There are plenty of reasonable use-cases for technology that violates at least one ToS, and not all ToS documents are reasonable.
My own view is that a ToS is a contract which I often won't read or actively consent to, and there are many companies who, out of excessive legal caution, will attempt to bind users in a restrictive tar of legalese. A lot of this is lawyers creating work for lawyers, and I am not in favour of it. It is a great pity that only a few web services pride themselves on a short, readable ToS, and that it is so rare that they feel able to shout about it.
In short: don't flag these at all.