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Some perspective, since I've been on the other side of exactly this issue, but for another bigco: While there may well be a backend issue, in many cases, the HAR file contains tons of useful details (in my product's case) for things like "what were responses from other service calls, was anything failing locally, was any state in a weird... state" that can then let me better understand what's going on in the backend, or even know where to be looking in the backend. These large services are _so complex_ nowadays that looking at a slice of backend logs without the frontend to dovetail can often be a very partial view of the world, or be a needle-in-a-haystack scenario. I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt here that it's similar to my project, clearly, they could maybe just be running a script (since we similarly request a HAR for all reports, since 99% of the time in practice it _is_ very useful), and you won't be harming anyone from trying to get a clear answer as to if the PG/triage group actually needs it to move forward and pushing back if they don't. I also imagine that, if they're anything like us, you could request explicit deletion of all your support data from that case after the case is done, and they'd have to comply per GDPR/etc (We certainly would) and they likely already have to silo the information in ways that explicitly makes sure that sort of PII doesn't end up in buckets it shouldn't. I don't know if this moves the needle for you, CC #s are still touchy, but just thinking out loud. Anyway, I hope this doesn't come across as apologetic for lax security practices, just wanted to give this perspective as I just remember the feeling of frustration of the customer refusing to send logs with a similar justification and my going "but it's going to be _much_ harder/impossible to diagnose your issue without that, and I have 0 doubts in my team's ability to properly handle and dispose of secure data as professionals, we are literally legally obligated to." |
Also, it’s not so much that I don’t trust Google to handle the files responsibly, I just think it’s principally wrong to ask customers to send highly technical files (that most people won’t understand the implications of) in this day and age, when everywhere else we are all trying our best to educate people how NOT to get tricked into sharing security credentials and credit card info.
How easy wouldn’t it be to call someone you know are having a payment card issue, claim you are from Google Support, and then ask them to follow the procedure to record a HAR file while they are trying to add a new card, and then send it to some Google-like email? Even though many now have learned that they shouldn’t give out their password to anyone or click random links in emails, I suspect that a huge percentage of people would have no idea of what they just emailed to some stranger in this scenario.
Do we really want the major players to teach their customers that it’s perfectly fine to share whatever with someone claiming to be a support rep? Shouldn’t we be moving in the other direction instead?