I just noted that one of the most popular question of mine was closed this summer after more then 4 years. In the meantime it was viewed 55k+ times (without single vote for close). I was going to ask the moderator in comment whether it makes sense to close so old questions, but I realized Meta is better place for such question.
Let me just elaborate a bit before I ask:
- Yes, by today's SO standard, the question clearly should be closed as off-topic.
- At the time the question was asked, it was common to ask that kind of questions as SO rules were not so restrictive and well-defined (proved by the fact it stayed opened for so long despite number of views).
- The question and its answers clearly provides some value to SO community given how many people have seen it. And please, bear in mind that by the community I mean here not just few top members with that of mine SO reputation (or even that of yours) who will answer this here on meta. It is also the average programer who might not even be registered user but uses SO day after day to improve their code. This is the majority of those who create SO traffic. To them old questions that do not follow today's strict rules might be more helpful then some of the new ones.
- By marking the question with big CLOSED we are implying to programers described in 3. that they there is something incorrect about this question or its answers. They might not generally understand what closed means on SO.
- It was very unlikely that somebody write new answer or comment to the question given its nature and age.
Let me now ask, why should we close this old famous (by SO terminology) questions? Wouldn't it be better to protect it or something like that (I do not remember what the other options are). It seems to me (correct me if I am wrong) that closed questions generate less traffic for SO, because average web surfer will just ignore it as incorrect. So why not to keep these questions open and use some other way to restrict new answers, so that they can be helpful to more people.
I have noted questions similar to this one have been risen before, but I believe I have made some new points here.