Recently, a question was posted which included the credentials for twelve accounts. Upon investigation, it appears those credentials are compromised accounts for Uplay (Ubisoft Connect), and frequently appear on sites trading in such information (example).
Now, obviously, this data is already out there. And the author of the post did nothing to highlight what the credentials are for. In fact, the post was about how to parse a list, and the credentials were merely included as sample data.
Nevertheless, I would assume:
- This information is being distributed without the consent or awareness of the account owners,
- The passwords may provide access to other resources associated with those email addresses,
- This information should not be redistributed on Stack Overflow.
Given that, I raised a custom flag to delete the post:
While the question of how to split this data might be on topic, the data itself appears to be from hacked/leaked account credentials posted online for Uplay (Ubisoft Connect) (example). It's doubtful this data was shared with the account owners consent. And, regardless, sharing these publicly almost certainly violates Ubisoft's TOS—though, admittedly, the purpose of the accounts isn't shared here.
This flag was declined, however, with the explanation that:
We can't enforce copyright. Ubisoft can request a DMCA removal
I imagine this was a simple oversight by a busy moderator, and would have been less likely had I been more focused and succinct in my custom flag. Lesson learned.
Still, I can't imagine this is content we want shared on Stack Overflow. Am I being overly sensitive to this issue? If not, can this post be reevaluated? It's currently closed as a duplicate, but I'd expect it should be deleted.