The list came from longurl.com, according to Shog's answer:
I pulled the list of shorteners from http://longurl.org/ (which seems to be down at the moment [note by Laurel: still down now]) and reduced it to the ones that've actually been used on Stack Overflow. Naturally we can block others if they crop up, but given the predominate use appears to be spam these days we can also just delete the posts.
I'm allowing amzn.to and youtu.be links, because as far as I'm aware they're special-purpose and not especially worse than the full URLs to those services. If I'm wrong about this (if, for example, you can craft an amzn.to URL that points to an arbitrary location), let me know and I'll add them to the list.
I'm the author of Removing link shorteners from posts! For those that don't know, that list is simply a translation of the regex in Shog's answer.
The list originally came from that site, and it must have been changed to exclude the two services mentioned.
From the many edits I have already made, I can tell you why removing link shorteners can be beneficial to a post.
- Many links are temporary. In particular, yfrog.com has a hundred links to pictures that no longer exist.
- Link Shorteners can be spammy. For example, bit.ly generates revenue from clicks. It's also unclear where it leads, so the destination may be actual spam.
If git.io can only link to GitHub, then it's similar to the reason short YouTube links are allowed. It's probably unlikely that the shortener service will go offline. And there are bigger problems if the entire site goes offline.
If you feel that expanding the URL would make it clearer where the link leads to, feel free to make that edit. It's probably not worthwhile in most cases, because it will always send you to GitHub (and not a bad site). I suspect that many people will tell you where the link leads to.
That being said, you can always make a suggestion on meta to change the list.
I have created a section at the bottom of my post dedicated to links that aren't blocked.
At this point however, it's more important to address links that are fragile. It's a lot harder to change a broken link, especially when the two clues that you have are: enter image description here
and some nondescript words about the glitch on your website that's caused by some browser I don't have. I have pinged many people asking if they would please fix their links, but I have gotten little response from anyone.
Must be a github.com URL
.