This is related to How to handle influx of [log4j] support questions, but it's been weighing on my mind and expressed in my conversations on Meta for quite some time now.
In simple terms: Stack Overflow leadership needs to set the expectations of question askers when they come to this site. The ability to do so at a curator's level is no longer sufficient.
We have a massive vulnerability with a popular logging library on our hands. In typical internet fashion, lots of technically inclined users are looking everywhere for information. In the void of vendors providing information, they are looking to the crowd to help gather that information for them - often in the form of, "Is X software vulnerable to this CVE?", or "how do I mitigate this CVE?"
These questions are not on-topic, and never have been. We have never purported to be the vendor or the party responsible for maintenance of these libraries. We have never been a definitive source of knowledge on what the mitigations for any vulnerability is or was.
However, because it's convenient to do so and the repercussions for doing so are light, people will ask on Stack Overflow anyway. At best, someone who's in the trenches with them (figuratively speaking) will provide a helpful answer for them. In a sense, this means that The System Works™, but in reality this is only furthering to mute actually on-topic questions about these logging libraries that don't pertain to us having to Google for a concerned technically inclined individual about whether or not their software they bought five years ago and never bothered to update or maintain is vulnerable to this CVE.
But this is a common thing I've identified over the last ten years here on Stack Overflow. We're a convenient resource, so we get these kinds of questions.
Right now though, we're at a crossroads. We're going to get a lot of these questions. We're going to continue to get a lot of these questions. And the few volunteer curators and diamond mods who know a thing or two about this enough to know to close it are going to be overwhelmed - it's not a matter of if, but a matter of when.
So I'm calling the leadership out on this one.
Make it clear to everyone asking questions that we cannot directly help them mitigate CVEs, and that they should be directing their questions to the software vendors and their appropriate communication pipelines instead.
If you value your product and have respect for the curation and moderation that has to happen, you'll at least say something about this. Not saying anything is going to make this swamp a whole lot more swampier.
Some clarifications and responses to comments:
Cody Gray: The sentiment of this vulnerability is that the attack vector is well established - a message that is logged out in any capacity is susceptible to this. What is not well-established is how that vector is exposed, or if it's exposed at all just based on someone's usage of the library. If they don't write logs at all even with this library, they're probably not vulnerable. If they don't write specific logs out based on human interaction, they're probably not vulnerable. So questions that ask "Is X vulnerable to this" fall flat on its face as lacking more details - we require more information than we are typically suited to get from a question asker.
The same thing applies to mitigation. "How do I mitigate X" depends on so many factors that it becomes a proper essay on how to deal with this. I would know; I'm working at a place that has to do this kind of triage. To me, mitigation based on individual circumstantial usage of Log4j or a vendor's usage of Log4j reads like the security equivalent of how to build a forum.
But more to the point, Cody - canonical dupes are only effective if there's enough people marking the sign post to it. If the company were to put some kind of message or something that detected if someone were talking about Log4j's vulnerability in their question, then maybe this form of curation could actually work. These days I have seen diminishing returns from canonicals such that, while they serve a purpose, if they're not amplified enough, we're going to be playing whack-a-mole this entire time.
Lastly...this is something I really do want to stress - when it comes to matters of security, Stack Overflow shouldn't be an option. Trusting disinterested strangers on the Internet with the security viability of your application is begging for trouble. Getting good and accurate and up-to-date information from the vendor is better. Case in point - Apache recently updated their guidance to explicitly discredit one popular and quickly-spread approach which would not close all attack vectors. Do you really think Stack Overflow's gonna update quicker than Apache on matters like that?
cigien: I think I'm looking for that extra amplification factor I explained above. Amplify the message of this being a serious CVE and this is a better place for you to get help with it. Casual users of Stack Overflow expect far too much of the site or the service when we're all just volunteers, likely dealing with this on our own, but we can't be relied on for accuracy or correctness unlike Apache could be. That's the expectation people should get when they come to Stack Overflow - the actual maintainers on this know this better, and while we're volunteers who might know a thing or two, we're not the authoritative source on this, and you really need to go looking over there, instead.
Ryan M: We already do some limited Regex word detection and provide guidance in select occasions when asking a question; why not there so that it's right in their faces?