Context is everything, so here's the question I'm talking about: Maven is not working in Java 8 when JavaDoc tags are incomplete
The top answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/16743137/1180785 is a perfect answer to the question as asked, and the question is perfectly reasonable. However, a colleague of mine today encountered the same errors as the OP, and found himself on that answer. He saw "You need to turn this off for Java 8 as specified in this thread", and added the proposed code immediately.
The issue here is that the errors are due to a linter which was added in Java 8 (not present in Java 7, which he was migrating code from), and the solution in that thread is to disable the linter to fix the errors. Looking at the question, this is perfectly reasonable: the OP is aware of the issues and is looking for a way to get a massive codebase compiling before he attempts to fix the mountain of new issues which have appeared. However, in my colleague's case, there were only a handful of issues identified and the correct approach was to fix them immediately.
It's made me worry about how many other places this could be happening (from the up-votes, maybe 190 other places?), and I'd like to edit in a warning to the question (something along the lines of "The best option is to fix the issues in your JavaDoc, but if there are too many then..."), but it seems superfluous from the context of the question (also who am I to claim a "best" solution attributed to somebody else's answer?)
It feels as though this must have been encountered before, so I expect the community already has a convention for dealing with this sort of thing, but I can't find anything on Meta (most questions seem to be about updating questions with new technologies rather than tangentially-related warnings).
What should I do?