NOTES
As I had already made quite clear in this question, I knew the other question might have been for legitimate research/academic reasons, but I just wanted somebody to check on it in case. I exaggerated my suspicion a little bit in the description behind my flag.
Also, I've accepted Bill the Lizard's answer, but I want to note that something was lost in translation in the reason I gave for the flag. I knew it could have been asked for academic purposes, but I didn't think of that sort of thing as being as common on this kind of site as other users have. If it's more common than I thought, I can see why the flag got rejected.
But there was a little bit said about it missing any detail of what I wanted the moderators to do about it. I think between me probably not proofreading it - and me previously thinking of such academic questions and uses as being more unusual than other folks did - I didn't actually say in the description that I wanted the intent to be checked on. I thought it was understood. But when I look back at the description that was typed, now I see that wasn't very clear.
And I know it's certainly difficult to verify something like that, but I was just taking a shot in the dark.
Yesterday I came across this question, which is fairly suspicious. The user's app is named "Essayagevirus", and he is asking a question about how to break through a firewall in .NET code.
Please understand that I realize that this seems rather out in the open, for it to be somebody who is actually trying to do something evil. It would be pretty foolish of them to not try to hide it more. So there's definitely a chance there's more to the story, but I just felt the need to flag it for a moderator to just check on it and try to see.
The flag was rejected, and the reason seems fairly awkward:
declined - flags should only be used to make moderators aware of content that requires their intervention
? This doesn't say the moderator checked on it and felt that nothing was wrong; it says the moderator felt like it just doesn't apply to them.
I'm not saying it was necessarily an attempt to do something malicious, but it was suspicious enough that I felt that somebody just needed to check on it. But if reasonably suspected attempts of people trying to get help constructing viruses don't count as something that needs moderator attention, then what does?
EDIT
One thing that's come up from a couple of different people is that I didn't specifically tell the moderator what I was wanting to do. But I'm not sure why this is a big deal. I said that I didn't want to jump to conclusions, but the question did look suspicious for being asked with malicious intent.
At work, if a client tells us one of our programs had problems over the weekend, doesn't that mean that they want us to check on it, see what happened, and do what's needed?
I can follow that moderators probably don't want to ban this kind of question entirely, as it can be for legitimate reasons. Part of the reason I said I didn't want to jump to conclusions is that I understood yesterday that this could have been for legitimate uses, even if it was a virus. And that may justify the given reason on its own...but I don't follow the other.