Stack Overflow can't provide the final, definitive solution to a problem of this type, but there is still value in an answer that tells the poster what to do next, particularly when someone else might trip over the same problem. We are a public resource and we optimize our description of the problem for maximum searchability. Vendor knowledge bases, bug trackers, and engineering support contacts tend to be poorly searchable at best, and often aren't public at all.
Therefore, I think questions that arise directly from a programming problem, where the next-action answer is "You need to take this up with a third party, who can be contacted at [hyperlink]", should be considered on-topic and an answer of that form should be considered the correct answer.
In addition to bugs in hardware drivers, here are some other example scenarios where this could come up:
As mentioned in the comments, in the C and C++ tags, it is uncommon-but-not-rare for the correct answer to "Is this MCVE valid code" to be "Congratulations, you have found a bug in your compiler, here is how to report it."
Similarly, in the various web-related tags, "how do I do X?" or "why does this page not draw as I expected?" might be best answered "this is a known bug in browsers A and B but works correctly in C, see the tracker here" or "that's not currently possible, here is how to advocate for a new browser feature".
This might be more relevant to ServerFault and its close relatives, but it's not unheard of for vendors to change the procedure for some manual task on every release; in that case, the best answer we can give is a pointer to the vendor's documentation plus instructions on how to know which version of the documentation to read.