I am the author of that "Copilot answer", and I'd like to give my thoughts on the matter.
First of all, I admit that my answer was subpar, as it didn't provide any explanation besides the code itself and can be perceived as just a mindless copy-paste, and the disclaimer about "minimal supervision" didn't help the matter. I tried to rectify that by editing the answer.
That being said, I believe it is not relevant to the question of whether Copilot can be used to answer SO questions in general.
Copilot is a tool. I think, that for theall intents and purposes of Stack Overflow answers, it's no different from using Google or code completion in IDEs. The only potential issue is the legality of its output.
On that, there is no definite answer yet (as in there is no established legal precedent; probably a good question for law.stackexchange). And I don't think there can be a simple answer either, it. It probably would differ on a case-by-case basis (see Google v Oracle case), but the point is open to debate.
Copilot and natural language neural nets in general work similar to humans in the sense that they memorize parts of their training data and then recombine them to achieve the given goal. See this article to get a sense of how original the Copilot output is (1one recitation event every 10 user weeks).
Currently, there are no restrictions on the usage of Copilot output from GithubGitHub and Microsoft, so I think the legal responsibility to avoid copyright infringement falls on the user. Note, this is pretty much the same as with any user-posted code. You don't know how that code was produced and whether it infringes some copyright. You just trust the user by default. Controversially, with Copilot you can probably be more confident that the code is original.
To summarise, I think that using Copilot to produce parts or the whole of the Stack Overflow answer is no different from using Google. You are still responsible for your answer, in terms of quality, relevance, and legality. The usage (from the legal standpoint) of the Copilot output for any purposes is not restricted at this point.
UPDUpdate: Since there are lots of questions regarding how exactly the original answer was produced, I recorded a short video, which illustrates the whole process.