A post by a 5k user about a simple shell script syntax problem was asked and rapidly answered and closed as a duplicate in October.
Now, several months later, this user is replacing the question text with a simple notice that they "deleted" it for reasons of confidentiality.
There is nothing obviously secret in the question, though I suppose some of the variable names may communicate to an astute competitor what the OP's employer is working on. (This is by no means clear to me, but nothing else in the question is something that I could imagine would be worth keeping secret.)
I repeatedly rolled back their edits and left comments suggesting that they contact a moderator to get (only) the confidential parts properly scrubbed, but they seem to be unreceptive.
I was thinking it was better to bend the rules a bit and roll back quietly more than once in order to not produce a "Streisand effect"; but now, I am unwilling to roll back the post more times, and frankly think they deserve the attention if they persist. (I'm still not linking to the post in question, though the terminally curious can probably find it based on information in this question.)
I am reaching out to the community for guidance, and also tangentially to explain the situation in more detail to the OP. I can see three courses of action here.
We vote to delete the post; the OP gets (roughly) what they wanted, though 10k+ users and users of the public data dump will still be able to see the post and its history, and of course it will remain visible to visitors to any site which has quietly mirrored Stack Overflow content, typically to try to steal some of the site's traffic.
In the absence of the vandalism, this would be my preferred course of action; the problem in the question is well-covered by existing duplicates, and so the question is unlikely to be particularly useful for future visitors.
Flag for mod attention. I imagine this actually already happened with the third rollback, but a dedicated flag with more background may be warranted.
Escalate to public shaming in some shape or form. I think we want to avoid this.