I recently came across What is VSCode remote doing during the "Downloading with wget" step?. VS Code's remote extensions are closed-source. This question in particular might be answerable by logging the syscalls made on the remote end, or by sniffing packets (I don't know enough about network layers and package sniffing to know if that's possible for TLS communications (related wireshark docs, which I don't understand)).
It prompted me to wonder if there's any point at which a question about the workings of a piece of closed-source programming-related software is not a good fit for this site.
I presume that a large class of such questions are answerable with reference to facts by someone with the right reverse-engineering / debugging / probing know-how...
If a question solicits fact-based answers to a question about a piece of programming-related software, does that necessarily make it on-topic / a good fit for this site- regardless of how much technical expertise it would take to find that answer in the case of the software being closed-source?
And if someone with that know-how comes along and knows that the question is impossible to answer, what should they do? And what about someone who doesn't have that know-how, but has suspicions that it might not be answerable? Just leave it?
I'm not talking about questions that bleed into the areas of opinions such as "why did the designers of the software choose to design their software this way". I've also heard of something called "speculation-based questions", but I think that doesn't apply here, since in theory (I don't have any examples on hand) some of the type of question in question here can be answered without speculation.
Related:
Questions about debugging/reverse-engineering binaries (does this answer this question? What if the question on the main site is phrased without asking for someone to debug / reverse-engineer / probe the software? rene's answer there doesn't give a clear statement on whether such a question is on-topic, though it does seem to say that such a question is not a good fit for this site if the question post doesn't provide relevant disassembly (or presumably other debugging info such as packet traces))
Would a question about how Git works internally be on-topic? (but git is open-source. @Bill the Lizard's answer touches on closed-source a little bit, but only a little bit)
Are "what technology does FooBarApp use?" questions on-topic? (closed as a dup of Why can't I ask customer service-related questions on Stack Overflow?, which I'm not sure if my question falls under the category of)
What should be done with questions that ask for nonexistent resources? (about informational resources such as documentation)