I, along with several other users, voted to close Visual studio 2017 unable to backspace, tab, or produce much functionality at all (screenshot in case the question gets deleted) because it asked for assistance with violating a software license. The user there mentioned they thought this was allowed because they had seen another question asking the same thing, and indeed were trying to use the advice from Visual studio 2015 CTP Trial expired?. That question was fairly popular, gathering multiple upvotes and 20K views over its lifetime. I know that Stack Exchange is particularly hesitant to remove popular questions because of the hit to page views, even when the questions would otherwise be off topic. So I flagged the question with the text:
This is a highly popular question, but it's asking for (and receiving) help with violating a software license. Now other questions such as 47982851 are being asked in reference to it, so it's setting a bad example.
The flag was declined with the response:
flags should only be used to make moderators aware of content that requires their intervention
I would think that a popular question on Stack Overflow explaining how to violate a software license and pirate the software would be something a moderator should take a look at. Voting to close an extremely old/popular question isn't likely to remove the content. And leaving that content around is just likely to be used as justification for others to do it in the future.
Was I right to flag this for a moderator? And should we be removing these sorts of questions?