I'm a developer that works with an institution that has been impacted by this vulnerability, and boy am I dissatisfied with how this blog post was presented.
Let's get the obvious out of the way - this is meant to be a blog post that showcases data. As in, the data around traffic increases to the site when this happened, and the fact that users come to the site as a resource when they need answers quickly. It's an "ooh, shiny" tale that on any other day for any other circumstance, wouldn't catch my attention.
There's two key points that I'm dissatisfied with in this post.
The risk level and the mitigation are gravely underplayed.
The bad news is the vulnerability could allow attackers to gain control of any system running specific versions of Log4j; potentially hundreds of millions of systems and projects were at risk. The good news is only some versions are vulnerable, and the solution is pretty simple: update Log4j to version 2.16+.
Yes, all you have to do is update the version of your Log4j2 library and you're pretty much OK. But this oversimplifies the gravitas of the problem to the level of insult. You sound like a C-level executive who doesn't know the shredder from the copier.
In a utopia, everything you develop has an associated build process, deploy process, review process, and you can turn around things quickly.
Not everyone lives in a utopia.
Not everything can "simply" be updated.
Some of us are in the middle of building a better tomorrow for our applications, and we got blindsided by this.
Some of us aren't fully aware of the scope of all of the applications we control or had to patch/update and thus can't update easy.
Some of us would be fortunate to find the original source code that existed because someone had the foresight to convince the contractor not to keep it on their own machine and at least provide a tarball so that it could be imported into SVN at a later date.
Some of us rely on third-party vendors who have this vulnerability in their application, and we explicitly cannot do anything until they do something....
"Tell me you've never dealt with legacy code without telling me you've never dealt with legacy code."
The company is - to no one's real surprise - implicitly encouraging this kind of behavior and traffic. I've said it before that we're really not in a position to parrot information about CVEs - no matter how major they are - because we're not the maintainer or vendor of that software. But it doesn't look like the Powers that Be really want to represent that or own that in any way.
In a situation where accurate information matters and we need less guessing and more precision, lots and lots of people coming to Stack Overflow and asking the same question is...a symptom of an issue. It means that there is more panic and more heads melting and people wanting to take action now as opposed to figuring out what action to take. In situations of a crisis, this is characteristically bad as it can lead to advice becoming quickly deprecated and Stack Overflow in no position to quickly maintain the flood of solutions suggesting it.
To be fair to the site, Stack Overflow's always been in that bind - information gets outdated and software becomes deprecated, yet people still rely on and leverage it. You're finally addressing it, but it's been a problem since time immemorial, and in this instance, we happened to have the worst case (e.g. not being able to clean up old/deprecated answers) play out in real time.
And you're asking the curators to pick up the slack. In real-time. While they may also have their hands full, not the least being dealing with a massive security vulnerability.
Bonus shout-out to the fact that the blog referenced the Twitter followers. You managed a whole five responses and three-hundred and forty-five votes! Maybe if there was some other community you could have asked the question to who would've been more responsive to this situation...
One more thing. I didn't call out the fact that the actual vulnerability lives in the log4j2 library, not log4j. They are two separate versions and they are two different logging frameworks. Log4j2 is the successor of Log4j. Log4j2 is compromised.
But hey - it's simpler to type "log4j" than it is to get the actual library right.