Yes, it can be. In this case, it's pretty obvious that reviewing the answer you linked to was a tedious and pointless thing to do, so I can understand why you didn't want to bother, but that's what the "skip" button is for: If you don't know/care/can't be bothered, skip it. Saying it looks OK means that the answer is, all in all, not bad.
The answer in question, though, breaks a few conventions, such as:
- Link-only answers
- Linking to payed service (fishy)
- No explanation as to usage, credibility or accounts of personal experience with the linked tool
In addition to that, you admitted to finding it a bad answer yourself. By clicking "looks OK", you didn't do the job properly.
You should've done either one of two things: vote to delete, or if you really didn't want to bother with that, hit the "Skip" button.
Why?
To answer your question, why do we review answers to a closed (and perhaps soon to be deleted) question?
To me, the reason for this is really quite obvious: A question might be closed, but it can be re-opened, for various reasons:
- Invalid close vote
- Duplicate questions can yield high quality answers, still. Good enough answers to justify keeping the duplicate (ie: not deleting it)
- Seemingly bad questions can be closed, but in the comments, the OP is chatting away with people who point out to him/her that the question needs to be edited. Meanwhile, an answer or two might get posted, referring to the comments. Some answers might benefit from some reviewing
- In case of closed duplicate questions especially, new users (who didn't know it was a dupe) might have had their first swing at answering. Reviewing a new users' answers is a good thing, still: it enables us to point them in the direction of the help section (what not to ask, what makes an answer a good answer, and how to vote etc...).
Consider the following scenario:
A gold-badge user votes a question as a duplicate. 1k+ means 1 vote to close, but other users find the answers posted to the particular question very informative, or the close-vote was unjustified. A couple of re-open votes are cast, and we go about our lives happily ever after.
Meanwhile, a new user might've posted a low-quality answer, right before the question was closed. New users' posts should always be pushed onto a review queue of sorts, IMO. By leaving out closed questions, some new users might end up posting a low-quality answer that slips under the radar. Getting that feedback to new users, welcoming and pointing out what is expected of them can't do any harm. The only possible effect you can get from it is a slight increase in user awareness a slight improvement in noise to signal ratio (I'm being very optimistic here).
If closed questions can be re-opened, then good quality answers are likely to play a role in the reopening, once a question is reopened, we'd like to have nothing but excellent answers to that question.
Answers by new users that clearly show that they haven't read the help section should be reviewed, and those users should, through a friendly comment, be told that what they're doing is not in tune with the format.
Having to hit the "skip" button, or deleting a bad answer to a bad question isn't that big of a price to pay, IMHO. Considering we could, potentially, improve the overall quality of both questions and answers. I think we're all agreed that that would be a good thing. As far as I'm concerned, hitting the delete or skip button once or twice is well worth it.
If that's too much of an effort for you, you can always steer clear of the low-quality answer queue...