Every now and then, we get custom flags reporting broken links in answers that are decidedly not link-only because the content is present in the answer either as a quotation, or in the author's own words. Something like
According to [this article]:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...
where "this article" is an actual link that has broken.
Our usual response to this is "flags should only be used to make moderators aware of content that requires their intervention", because broken links are something that anyone can attempt to fix on their own, without requiring any mod-only abilities.
But lately I've been wondering... what if said link can not be fixed, for example because the linked page was not crawlable and therefore never indexed on the Internet Archive, and no other mirrors or alternative sources exist of it? What happens to the text? Do we assume the quotation was accurate at the time of posting, or should the text be considered "no longer verifiable" or something and the post as a whole link-only (if there is no other original content)?
The reason I ask this now is because I just encountered a flag in which the user said the broken link made the whole answer useless despite the content being right there in the answer, which made me wonder if by "useless" they meant "no longer verifiable", because otherwise literally dismissing the entire thing as useless seems excessive to me...