I have been working in email marketing for a while now and it seems that anybody and everybody who has spent a weekend reading a book on HTML 5 feels qualified to answer questions about this very specific and intricate problem domain of making emails render the same in 50 different combinations of browsers, operating systems, email clients and with different email service providers.
I don't have the clout to knock down the baddies... should I make an effort to comment on wrong answers that are highly up-voted?
(This is often not a question of right and wrong -- it is generally a pretty obvious example of someone confusing the problem domain of getting an email to render correctly in 50 different combinations of browsers, operating systems, screen sizes, and email clients with making a website coded in html 5 with stylesheets run nicely in major browsers).
e.g. I need to find the one person who can tell me that I need to front load my email with sacrificial conditional comments so that my real conditional comments render on outlook365.com. (It is now higher than 3 as answered elsewhere. I ended up needing 9 for my last one). I need the person who can tell me that blackberries like the alt tag to precede the img tag. I might need, perhaps, to find the guy who knows that #000000-colored links will turn blue in gmail, but #000001 will render as intended.
But I don't need someone to link me to the w3c specification of html 5 attributes... how would one handle this? There are specfiic sites for email only but they are not quite as trafficked and well... it's affecting my rep to be asking "dumb" questions, as well as perhaps polluting the community with bad answers when I can't curate them decently.