Today I came across this question during review.
In short, the conclusion was that the problem was actually a bug in the library, which was resolved in a later version.
Often, when having an issue with specific open-source library, OPs are redirected to the repository of said library and are told to open an issue there (which, in this case would be resolved by the update mentioned in the answers).
While it is possible that someone, someday will install an old-enough version of the library and run into this problem, this option becomes unlikely as time goes by. However, generally, a new user would use a more recent version, which has this bug fixed.
So - I'm thinking whether this is close enough to "a problem that can no longer be reproduced" (technically, it can be reproduced by obtaining the offending version somehow, but practically, the probability of anybody running into this problem is small and getting smaller).
I'm not saying that the information in that Q&A is not valuable (hence: meriting deletion), I just consider it unlikely that an answer better than those already posted would ever appear, so, is there a point in keeping such questions open?