I personally use 'journalctl -u whoopsie' to see what I've uploaded e.g.:
May 17 10:19:48 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:19:48] Parsing /var/crash/_usr_bin_nautilus.1000.crash. May 17 10:19:48 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:19:48] Uploading /var/crash/_usr_bin_nautilus.1000.crash. May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Sent; server replied with: No error May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Response code: 200 May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Reported OOPS ID 9540a15e-1c53-11e6-a632-fa163eec78fa
But if you want to stick the OOPS ID in the .uploaded file that's fine with me.
I personally use 'journalctl -u whoopsie' to see what I've uploaded e.g.:
May 17 10:19:48 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:19:48] Parsing /var/crash/ _usr_bin_ nautilus. 1000.crash. _usr_bin_ nautilus. 1000.crash. 1c53-11e6- a632-fa163eec78 fa
May 17 10:19:48 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:19:48] Uploading /var/crash/
May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Sent; server replied with: No error
May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Response code: 200
May 17 10:20:00 impulse whoopsie[28493]: [10:20:00] Reported OOPS ID 9540a15e-
But if you want to stick the OOPS ID in the .uploaded file that's fine with me.