Update: This question is asking "is there a better way to report trivial break/fix issues". After reading around about Meta, I'm more convinced this system saves the developers time and works well in the Meta community.
- If I look at the bug queue, most have between -10 and 10 votes. This weighting of bug reports means the official maintainers probably do get added value from passing their break/fix queue through here first, because Meta commentators are a tenacious kind who investigate and downvote/upvote appropriately.
- @rene in the comments here suggested updating my question to provide a more complete picture. If even a small percentages of reporters think to do that, the community will save a considerable amount of time for the official maintainers.
It's not a system I would have guessed would work - I hope the company appreciates how dedicated the regulars here are.
I found a 404 error reading an old blog post, which says "If you've just run into a broken link, please report it at our feedback site.", linking here. I thought it was weird to link to a public venue instead of a bug tracker, but I shrugged and did as asked
Within five minutes, there were two posts saying "why didn't you google this before asking?". I already had, folks - I'd already found the document I was after, and only posted about the broken link because SO explicitly asked me to. It's a bug report, not a support request.
Anyway - I'm new here, but it seems to me like this Meta site is an interesting place, but the wrong channel for "here's a broken link, fix that some day". It's offputting for occasional guests like me to do exactly what the site asks, and get told off for not googling things - but it makes total sense for the community to discourage this kind of content.
Why? Because my "question" was a completely non-interactive break/fix issue, and it's using up valuable screen space while having no value or interest to 99.9% of the community. The only people who can fix old blog posts are whichever members of staff have moderator rights over there! There's a reason that bug trackers are tagged and filtered off to only the relevant people - it's because a lot of the work requested there is only actionable by a few people, and no-one else needs or wants to see it.
So: there an existing backchannel to report break/fix issues? Or, more specifically, to report things that are only relevant to SO staff, not by the community as a whole? If so, maybe the 404 page point should point there instead.