Call it a bug or call it a feature. It is dangerous though.
When using `ls -l` to list a directory with links in it, it will produce
an output similar to this:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 user group 30 1980-01-01 00:01 link_name ->
/path/to/destination/file
Pretty cool, huh?
However, if you select this line and accidentally hit right mouse
button, it'll get copied to your prompt. And if you select more than one
line, it'll get copied with \n which will get interpreted as if you
pushed the Enter.
So the whole line gets interpreted as a command:
lrwxrwxrwx [no such command] 1 user group 30 1980-01-01 00:01 link_name
- [parameters for non-existing command] > /path/to/destination/file
[redirect output to that file]
Since the output is empty, you'll get the target of that link
overwritten with an empty file.
My suggestion is to change the representation symbols of link to
something that won't get interpreted.
Cheers,
Mike