A question circa '10 was recently edited bringing a whole new extended meaning to it. The edited question is now out of context regarding some other questions that link to it, esp. Android front camera.
Worse, the same editor posted a new answer to this question, which is both irrelevant for the original question, and also is wrong.
The question has been protected by Community♦ since Jul 15 '11, but this protection did not prevent hijacking. Unfortunately, the TS abandoned the question and the whole SO site quite a while ago, and neither a correct answer nor the most upvoted extended answer can be 'accepted' through normal procedure.
I believe this is an example of abuse of SO procedures, and we should find a way to improve them.
I agree that discussion of whether a new answer was "wrong" or "well-worked out" is out of scope here.
Generally speaking, adding an answer "Please note that if you have a newer system, you should do this or that" to the old question is legitimate. If the question were not abandoned, it could even be accepted. Unfortunately, this question was abandoned immediately upon posting.
I believe that the due process to face the changing reality of public APIs is to create a separate question, like Android camera android.hardware.Camera deprecated an answers therein. A question how do I open "front camera" now that android.hardware.Camera is deprecated is legitimate, IMHO, while extending a question that referred to Android 2.2 is not.