Talk:Tutorial: Proxy Connection/@comment-68.255.2.37-20151012031634/@comment-25667360-20151014141503

Actually, the devs probably wouldn't give a damn about leaked API links. I've never heard of any situation where someone who leaked their API link to the public was able to undo the subsequent vandalism. For all intents and purposes, leaking your API to the public (on purpose or otherwise) is effectively the same thing as giving someone your username and password (i.e. it gives them access- albeit temporarily- to your account), which in general is a violation of a website's terms of service. Now, I don't know about the particulars of DMM, but I'd imagine if you were dumb enough to do this and asked them to fix it, they'd ignore you completely or give you a cut-and-paste "sorry, we can't do anything, be more careful in the future" response.