Summary: Not exactly useful question showing no research - close to 0 total votes count over 3 month is ok.
In my view there are basically two categories of votes:
- initial votes, mainly focused on quality of the question (demonstrates research). This is where you expect most of the downvotes to happen. The "initial" period is at most a day, but it is restated/extended by bounties and meta posts like this.
- lifetime votes coming due to organic search where people find answers to their question and potentially upvote the question because it matched the problem they were looking for.
Initial votes:
For this question there is absolutely no "demonstrated research" and it is quite unusual thing to do (getting tens of thousands of results to looks through is strange, but indeed it has its uses). As result, the question got corresponding votes for lack of research and usefulness.
Please note that the only outcome of "I did search around on SO but didn't find an answer, any help would be appreciated" text included in the original version of the question would be to invite downvotes. If you could not find answers/relevant information leaving such text out will keep the question free of fluff. What would be useful to show research are links (or lack thereof) to the official documentation on the feature you used (configuration of search in VSCode this case). In this particular case explaining that you checked settings for search would be nice too.
Thing to note is that showing research is not required for a question to be on-topic on SO. It is generally recommended for questions that immediately cause "duh, there is probably setting for that" or "I bet it is written on first line of the method docs" (which is exactly the case here, especially seeing your answer) to clarify why the question is not so trivial.
Lifetime votes (3 month for this question):
The second group of votes (usually upvotes) needs good SEO and some sort of demand for the problem. For SEO full error/warning message (especially one without any dynamic portions like in this case) is a good start, a good title without much fluff may be beneficial (also it is very hard to predict what a "good SEO title" would be). I think SEO side of the question is fine even in the original version.
What I see as the main problem for the question is lack of demand. I expect most people facing this warning to say "makes sense, no way I'm going to read through those thousands of lines", the other would say "hmm, VSCode has sh*-load of settings, I bet there is one" (and would be right - it can be easily found searching for "search" in the VSCode settings), and just remaining tiny number of people (~200 over 3 month) would try to search for error message on they favorite search engine (you probably can't capture folks searching on Amazon :), but Google/Bing are ok). Note that a post needs way more than 200 views to get any meaningful upvotes - it goes as low as 1 vote for 1000 views (an example with 2 million views and less than 2000 votes)