I have a question about my answer here, which was deleted. (For those who don't have privileges to see the deleted answer, I provided some context and a link, but I didn't pull the relevant parts of the link into my answer as another answerer did.)
I'm happy to abide by the judgement of the reviewer and am not trying to get the answer revived.
After all, I understand the general problems associated with overly depending on a link. Especially if it's a blog post, it could be here today, gone tomorrow.
But to take this specific example, it references the current control plane for Azure, Azure Resource Manager. Not so long ago the dominant control plane was Azure Service Manager.
My question: is there utility in distinguishing between the problem of transitory blog posts, and the sort of massive open-source documentation effort that Microsoft (and Google Cloud and AWS, for that matter) are spending vast amounts of time and resources on? In a few years' time, if I click on the link I provided in my answer, I may well get a 404, or a redirect. That will be my signal (as it would have been a few years ago, if I was clicking on a similar link for Azure Service Manager) that I may be barking up the wrong tree. Whereas if I find a pristine explanation of the old control plane here, I might grapple with it, ask questions or comment, go and run some commands, and get the dreaded 'deprecated'.
Sure, someone can provide a comment that the answer references a deprecated API. But that doesn't seem as visceral (or reliable) as getting a 404 or redirect.