It's not possible to ascertain whether they have provided info in addition to not working but highly reliable anecdotal analysis indicates they don't ;)
Aye, but this is the rub.
Your anecdotal evidence is just a reflection of the fact that the majority of new questions on Stack Overflow are utterly abysmal crap that should have never gotten posted in the first place. The issues run far wider and deeper than the lack of description about what "not working" means.
A well-written question will often say something like
I have written the following code [snippet], but it is not working. Instead of dividing the two variables, it throws a DivideByZeroException
. What does that mean? I have tried doing [x], but the compiler formatted my hard drive. How can I fix this code so that it will compile?
Your filter would block that because I said "not working". Oops.
To put it another way, in good writing, you generally start by telling someone what you are going to tell them, like a preview or a summary. You'd start out by making the claim that the code is not working, then you'd go on to expand on that, explaining why it is not working. If you block any question that does that, you're guaranteed a bunch of false positives.
Of course, I'm not against filtering new questions in principle. On the contrary, I am very much in favor of that. I just think there are better heuristics that we can use. The heuristics used by the "low quality" posts queue are apparently pretty good—I see very few false positives in there. You'd need to take multiple factors into account: length, spelling, punctuation, the presence of code snippets, etc. etc.
One thing we could do, though, is provide just-in-time help. This has been suggested before, many times. I'm too lazy to hunt down the links now, but a few minutes of searching on https://meta.stackexchange.com/ should help—start with the query "clippy". One of the triggers for the just-in-time help could be the phrase "not working". Something distinctly non-paperclip-like would appear in the right-hand margin of the question editor screen and remind you to include a complete description of the problem, blah blah. Probably linking to the MVCE page.
People who know how to ask a good question could ignore it. And so would the people who don't care about writing a good question. But you might get lucky and catch that 1% of conscientious askers.