It is common in google-sheets and google-apps-script for answerers to ask questioners to share a Google sheets file. Some requests in the last 24 hours:
Almost half or more of the questions in these tags has or is requested to have a sample spreadsheet.
The obvious advantages:
- Easier to visualize the data structure
- Easier to test an answer
The disadvantages and the point of this post:
Those links can easily be revoked after getting an answer- making the post unusable to future users.
- This promotes sub-standard questions; questions which are not clearly explained or almost all explanations depend on the external link. However, the questioner gets an answer and the answerer gets their reputation, even if there is no net value added to the community.
Unbeknownst to the user sharing the spreadsheet, they are exposing their personal email address too. The email address of the questioner can usually be accessed by opening the spreadsheet>Share menu. Alternatively, if you don't want to open the spreadsheet, it is easily accessible from the following API. So, scrapers can easily get the data. You don't need a Google account. At the bottom of the page (Try this API), you just need to enter the spreadsheet id, set fields to
*
, disable OAuth and execute.
Furthermore comments such as these give users a false sense of security as they are convinced that they had removed all sensitive information.
I understand that this boils down to whether users consider their email address private and whether they know that by sharing their spreadsheet, they are sharing their email address too. I believe they are unaware of the latter and hence this discussion.
Does the community see it is a violation of privacy? If so, what can be done to moderate the users participating in this tag? In my opinion, the data structure can clearly be shown in the question as csv or as a table as shown in this question or a plain screenshot image- all of which add value to the question, answer and the community.
Related: What to do when an OP posts someone's email address?
Note: I don't believe that there's any malicious intent behind any of the requesters/answerers.