Not every answer that consists of a hyperlink only will entirely become useless if the link target becomes temporarily or permanently inaccessible.
In this case, the hyperlink text holds instructions: "Specify symbol (.pdb) and source files in the Visual Studio debugger" that remain useful even without the link.
While I don't think that this is an example of a quality contribution, that's arguably a reason to decline the link-only flag.
There's a related community wiki with an answer that summarizes "What NOT To Flag":
Any post that attempts to answer the question — however badly — is still an answer! Do not use the "not an answer" flag for wrong answers. Moderators do not judge the technical correctness of answers.
You can downvote such answers as a signal that they are bad answers and not useful, but they are still answers, so you should not flag them.
That seems to be the case here: A really poor answer that's still an answer.
Valid options here are (and this just is repeating site rules, not necessarily my opinions on how things should work):
- Try to improve it, and/or
- Vote on it