In my time posting on Stack Overflow, it happens that every now and then I stumble across a question that includes private/confidential information that certainly should not be public (API keys being the most common).
The first time this happened, I came to Meta and searched for the best way to handle this problem. Among the questions I found were:
- If you accidentally added confidential information on Stack Exchange, can you have it purged?
- Questions with proprietary or confidential information
- What should I do if a user posts sensitive information as part of a question or answer?
The recommended procedure seems straightforward: raise an "in need of moderator intervention" flag, explain the problem, and you're done.
However, more than once, the moderator handling my flag has marked it as "helpful" but then failed to actually solve the problem. When I return to the question and look at the edit history, the private information is still there. In fact, every single one of these flags that I've raised (admittedly a small sample size) has been handled in such a way that the private information persists.
I don't know much about the procedure for becoming a moderator. I don't know what the training is like (or if there is any training at all), but I propose that the training around handling this type of issue be improved to make it easier for moderators to solve these issues.
An implicit assertion of the above is that I'm actually writing clear flags that should lead the moderator to the correct course of action. I'm perfectly willing to admit that this might not be the case, though, so here's the last flag of this type I raised:
The attached image appears to include confidential information (the
adUnitId
). I'm hoping a moderator can edit the image out in such a way that the revision history doesn't include a link to it anymore.
If this should be improved, I'd love to hear how.
adUnitId
really is confidential information? What exactly are the consequences of leaking it? Are you sure that it's the moderator making the wrong call, here, and not you?