I don't see anything on the project euler website that prohibits people from posting answers on the web. In fact, if people wanted solutions, they could easily google it and be done with the day. There's no "terms of conditions" that I can find like this answer suggests. It may be a different story on the forums, however, you need to register an account in order to visit it. Outside visitors who don't have an account therefore cannot possibly know the rules, forum culture and expect to know to behave if the main website doesn't have an explicit terms of conditions.
Secondly, MichaelT makes a compelling argument regarding meta tags:
The project euler tag (or spoj) says nothing about the actual problem
but rather the context it is in.
A good question is a good question regardless of its relationship to
homework, project euler, spoj, or any on line code contest. On the
other hand, a question tagged with such is often used as an 'excuse'
as to why it exists at all - trying to make up for poor quality with
"but its a real problem in this website."
This tag should go the way of homework.
Take a look at kr-c tag, an obsolete book which predates the ANSI standard. Despite the fact that the book is over 20 years old, we still have people coming here with questions like K&R exercise - just need someone to check which have a shitty title, demonstrate no research effort and consists of a code dump. It's technically mutually exclusive with the C tag because modern compilers don't support pre-standard C and most people will be programming in C89/90/ANSI mode by default, unless they're using some ancient compiler like Turbo C. If you were to remove the C tag, like MichaelT's answer suggest, the tag serves no purpose.
It's not necessarily a bad thing to be practicing exercises from the book, but to use the tag as an excuse for a crap question is the issue at hand here.
On the other hand, project euler has interesting puzzles and generates interesting discussion on their website, but Stack Overflow unfortunately is at the ass-end of it and attracts people who want a quick and easy answer rather than to solve the puzzle intellectually. It's perfectly possible to have interesting, well-researched questions but I just don't see that on the tag. I think if the tag were to disappear, it would be more immediate that "project euler" adds nothing of value to the question and that a crap question is a crap question.
coursera
or any other source of learning.