The lock notice exists for the author(s) even more than it does for the readers. It gives them an avenue to ask what in the heck is going on. Situations like this are often indicative that one or more participants are confused or unaware of site policy or community norms, so directing them to Meta prompts them to seek clarification rather than continue to engage in whatever they're doing that resulted in a moderator getting involved.
The events on the post at hand are fairly clear from the history:
- User posts link only answer.
- Someone tries to add information to make it not link only.
- Answerer decides they want their answer to remain link only. They're likely unaware of site policy to the contrary.
- Multiple users proceed to engage in edit war trying to expand the answer. They may be unaware that edit wars are frowned upon.
- The edit war resulted in a flag, possibly an automatic one or perhaps someone decided to raise it personally.
- Moderator puts post in a middle ground state by making the post a single sentence. Moderator then locks the post to end the edit war.
Someone involved in the edit war was confused. The answerer probably wasn't aware of site policy regarding link only answers. The users continually trying to edit details in may not have been familiar with our discouragement against engaging in edit wars. If anyone had wanted to get clarification about who was following site policy/guidelines and who wasn't or how the situation could have been handled better, Meta would be the place for them to ask.
No Meta discussion had been raised on this particular post. The users trying to edit the answer into shape didn't have any questions about what content is appropriate on SO, and the answerer chose not to engage with the community to try to figure out why people were editing their post.
When a Meta discussion is actually raised, a comment linking to it is completely sufficient.
All that said, let this example drop. The question is clearly off topic and was correctly closed long ago. It doesn't matter whether the answer is locked since recommendation questions are typically poorly maintained anyway (which is why they're forbidden).