Let's go through the points one by one, shall we?
This question is not focused, and can have many valid answers
Please read on till the clarification given by the same help center: "but no way to determine which - if any - are correct". This close reason exists to avoid questions that aren't properly scoped from cluttering the knowledge base, not to shut down questions that "can have many valid answers". The scope issue also corresponds to the second meaning of the close reason: "includes multiple questions in one".
I think there is no need to clarify why "disable autocomplete in the major browsers" does not actually suffer from either of the problems covered by this close reason.
It doesn’t have any code example
It does not have to. We do not close posts just because they do not have a code example. But we do use the lack of an MCVE as an indicator of a potentially problematic post and thus, especially when a question is unclear, is a common advice given by users to the question askers.
If one of your posts (or you witnessed this happening) has been closed solely because it lacks a code example, please do bring this up as a standalone discussion, and we all can take a look at it - sometimes it does happen, but, in my honest opinion, it is a misuse of close vote privilege and should be called out.
Answers to this question, can lead to opinionated discussion.
Assuming that this is a shot at the question being "opinion-based", we do not close posts that can lead to an opinionated discussion either. We use this close reason to close posts that primarily attract answers based on opinion and thus cannot be falsified in a strict sense of the word.
Which is exactly what the same help center talks about a little bit further on (in the context of editing opinion-based questions into shape): "focus on a more fact-based line of questioning. If you see a way to do this, consider editing the question""
It doesn’t address any specific problem
Except when it does, specifically how to "disable autocomplete in the major browsers for a specific input". Being somewhat of an SME, I fail to see how this very common (I dare say trivial) task is not a specific problem. You will have to do better than just claiming that it is not.
It is duplicated question
When suggesting that something is a duplicate, the onus is on the suggesting party to provide the said duplicate the post should be closed against. It does not need to be an older target, just a better one - so if you can provide the target and be able to defend your position against scrutiny, we will gladly close this post as a duplicate of the proposed target.
OP didn’t make any research before asking - it’s trivial to find.
We do not require question askers to provide proof of their "sweat" before deciding whether the question should stay. The central question has always been: is this question a valuable addition to the knowledge base or not? If it is, it does not matter whether the asker wrote a thesis on the subject matter or is just too lazy to solve the problem themselves.
One also has to note that the post in question was asked in August 2008, also known as the very early days of Stack Overflow's existence. When building a knowledge base, you have to start somewhere, don't you think? To be able to close countless lazy and unthought-through questions against a great canonical you must allow it to be asked at least once.
Doesn’t related to specific tool
This point is the only one that makes sense but is also not an argument here because the premise regarding the question not being about a specific programming problem is false in the first place. Note that the help center lists topics that a given question can be about as a union and not as an intersection:
- a specific programming problem, or
- a software algorithm, or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development