To expand on the accepted answer:
This typically comes up when a new user without sufficient privilege to inline the image includes one anyway. By editing the post, you are vetting the image as a privileged user, verifying that it includes relevant and non-objectionable content, and improving the experience for most users.
It's true that excessive images can be annoying to some (especially those of us with limited Internet connections), but as long as they add something to the question, it is better to go ahead and have them visible when the page loads.
Editing is usually pretty easy. In most cases, all you have to do is add the !
character before the bracketed link to indicate that it's an image to display.
While you are editing, you should also replace any placeholder "enter image description here" text with something more useful. The users who rely on this descriptive text for accessibility will very much appreciate it, and it also enhances searchability (images aren't generally searchable, but useful text describing the image can help them show up in Google anyway).
Finally, the one except to all of the above is when the post itself isn't very high quality to start with and including the image isn't going to help. We occasionally have users who post their code as a screenshot, which is pointless. I don't see any utility in fixing those posts to show the code; the author of the question needs to remove the image altogether and replace it with the text of their code, so inlining the image doesn't add anything useful there and I wouldn't bother.
But otherwise, by all means…improve those posts.
[enter image description here][1]
links that don't actually show an image, is pretty annoying. There's probably an argument that posts with multiple of these are usually of poorer quality to begin with, though.