This came up in a recent question in which content from a historically locked question was updated.
As I understand historic locks, they're meant for content which was on-topic at one point in our site's history, but really aren't suitable for the site now, but they still hold some value to the site. (While this raises other discussions of why bother with them at all, that's orthogonal to this discussion.)
It was the case that a decision was made to update content for that question. While I still disagree with that decision, I'd like to be sure that my thinking on this process as a whole is right in spite of that.
Under what specific criteria is a historically locked question deemed valuable enough to warrant updates from diamond moderators? Is view count alone enough (e.g. is there a specific view count that would give credence to updating it), or does there have to be something more for it to exist? I'd like to understand the rationale so that I have a better grounding of situations like that, in spite of how rare they are.