I'll refer you to [my previous answer on the topic][1], and animuson hits the key points here. Stack Exchange and moderators have no role in enforcing a nondisclosure agreement between a developer and a company. Questions should not be closed because someone believes they violate some kind of legal agreement, and ones that were [were closed in error][2]. This comes up every time that Apple announces new beta products and APIs. I strongly dislike [the vigilante justice that I see forming around questions that might be under NDA][3], leading to even questions not covered by NDA being downvoted and closed for bogus reasons. This time around, things are different. I'll once again quote the confidentiality portion of the iOS developer license agreement (as it was publicly available when I posted the first answer linked above, and hasn't changed much): > **4. Confidentiality.** You agree that any Apple pre-release software (including related documentation and materials) and any information > disclosed by Apple to you in connection with Apple Events or Paid > Content (defined below) will be considered and referred to as “Apple > Confidential Information”. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Apple > Confidential Information will not include: (i) information that is > generally and legitimately available to the public through no fault or > breach of yours, (ii) information that is generally made available to > the public by Apple, (iii) information that is independently developed > by you without the use of any Apple Confidential Information, (iv) > information that was rightfully obtained from a third party who had > the right to transfer or disclose it to you without limitation, or (v) > any third party software and/or documentation provided to you by Apple > and accompanied by licensing terms that do not impose confidentiality > obligations on the use or disclosure of such software and/or > documentation. The key part of this is > Apple > Confidential Information will not include: (i) information that is > generally and legitimately available to the public through no fault or > breach of yours Well, Apple made publicly available pretty much [all documentation about iOS 8][4], [documentation about Swift][5], etc. and stated that anything covered at WWDC is [considered a public disclosure][6]. It's hard to find anything that is covered by NDA anymore, so even if we did care about the NDA between Apple and developers, only a tiny fraction of the questions posted here would even qualify now. I haven't seen a question yet that contained information not publicly disclosed by Apple somewhere. Maybe complaining about some specific broken part of beta software wouldn't be the best fit on Stack Overflow (we used to close those as being too localized in time), but Apple engineers themselves are regularly answering Swift and iOS 8 questions here, so I wouldn't worry too much about it any more. [1]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/49366/135615 [2]: https://twitter.com/bradlarson/status/378262927603539971 [3]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/184635/135615 [4]: https://developer.apple.com/library/prerelease/ios/releasenotes/General/WhatsNewIniOS/Articles/iOS8.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40014205-SW1 [5]: https://developer.apple.com/swift/ [6]: http://oleb.net/blog/2014/06/apple-lifted-beta-nda/