While looking at a question, OP edited it to add some additional code, but there was one issue: the new code included the names, gender, and phone numbers of real people from their database.
I decided to do a rollback to the previous version, but rollbacks do not remove/hide the latest edit from the stack, they add a new edit with the selected version of the question. That is understandable, as you want to keep track of all changes, but it is a problem too as now even anonymous visitors (or web crawlers) can check the question history, and see personal information from certain people*.
I don't know how common this issue is, but it isn't the only case I've seen on SO in which passwords, API codes, or other private information that should not be public are displayed because the user posted it by mistake.
Is it possible to limit who can see the rollbacks? (or to be correct, the previous version of a rollback). I think it would be a good idea to limit it to the owner and previous editors of the post and to registered users with a minimum reputation.
Seeing rollbacks could turn into a new privilege (or directly be included in the Edit Questions And Answers one), and it would not interfere with the user's ability of editing/rolling back posts, just with the capacity to see other users' rollbacks.
[* Note: since this particular case happened, OP's edit was removed from the revision history by the moderators, and it's no longer available for regular users to see.]