This is based on this support request from fazy about several potential issues due to the fact that SO and Teams account are not separate entities. As this received no response, I tried one of the potential scenarios out myself.
It turns out that if you join a Team via a company email address while logged into Stack Overflow with a personal account, this allows anyone with access to your company email account to take over your private account. This is a straightforward consequence of the way SE accounts and logins work and the fact that the Teams account is not actually separate from the Stack overflow account. But I would argue that this is not an expected result for a typical user that isn't deeply familiar with these kinds of implementation details.
The following steps show how this works:
- Join a Team using your company email while logged into your personal Stack Overflow account
- Your personal Stack Overflow account will join the Team
- Your company email address will be automatically and silently added to your personal account
- Request a password reset using your company email address
Anyone that can redirect or access your company email account can take over your personal account with a simple password reset. You can prevent this by manually removing the login based on the company address as far as I can tell, but that is far from obvious to a typical user, especially as this login is added silently while joining a Team.
This issue also works in the other direction to some extent, as it means that the Teams administrator can't control all pathways to password resets. So e.g. if you have a strong 2FA policy on your company email account, this still could leave a weak private email account as an attack vector to your Team. Especially since the default login method by SE doesn't even have the option to add any 2FA method, and a site like Stack Overflow might not be one where you use your strongest password.
I think it is a very surprising and unexpected result that joining a Team gives your employer the possibility to access your personal Stack Overflow account. While I think the true solution is to treat Teams as a completely separate account, this is unlikely to be feasible. But SE should add some mitigations to prevent these potential issues.
One option would be to directly ask the user if they actually want to link their current account to the team, and inform them about the consequences of doing so. That dialog could also offer alternatives like creating an entirely separate account or using the existing account while not adding the company email as a login.
I find the total silence from SE on what is arguably a security and privacy issue to be rather disappointing.
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(some number). He then invited my work email to join the team and I accepted - in a totally different browser and private browsing mode. I now have private browsing tabs open in Chrome - logged into personal account, shows as a member of the work team again. In Firefox - logged into work account, links to my personal account but only shows public content.