I have been on this platform for 14 years.
Then you ought to understand at least the basics about how it works.
Instead, I am seeing a "new contributor" indicator on your post here - which is to say, in all this time it did not occur to you even once to come to the meta site to ask about policy or contribute an opinion on someone else's interpretation of policy, etc. (I'm not sure exactly how long there has been a separate meta site, but I am confident that there was much fanfare when it was unveiled.)
I am in the top fraction of a precent of contributors
As someone in a roughly comparable position on the leaderboards, let me be the first to assure you that this doesn't mean nearly as much as you seem to think it does. In particular, it does not entitle you to any special treatment, nor does it make you any more qualified to judge what meets the site's standards.
The latter qualification comes from engaging with the community, reading policy (along with the documentation that lays out the rationale for that policy), meditating on the site's purpose, and putting in time to curate the site.
Reputation says precious little about any of this. About 5.8% of my reputation comes from a single answer to this obviously garbage question which I have been trying to get deleted. (If your reaction was "of course that's garbage, it's some noob asking obvious things" then you have failed the exam; go back to the textbook.)
I can no longer use this platform in order to engage with experts to answer niche questions
You absolutely can do this, and it happens all the time on this site. For example, questions tagged language-lawyer
with 10+ question score, sorted by newest.
However, you must ask a question that meets the site's standards, which are clearly advertised in multiple easily-accessible locations. The question you attempted fails on multiple grounds.
"Now that it is almost 2024" is the lead-in for something that would be asked on a discussion forum. Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum, and never was. The model was created - albeit experimentally - specifically so that people could avoid the frustrations associated with trying to research a problem and stumbling on a traditional discussion forum. Nowadays we have a much more refined understanding of how to make the system work, but that fundamental idea has not changed.
The question as asked in the title needs more focus (is "too broad", in older terms) as zwol's answer points out - even if we disregard that it's blatantly seeking recommendations.
You start off by proposing a candidate and then immediately writing it off for a reason that is outside of your initial framing. If you really are asking what gives the maximum possible security, then it does not matter whether that solution is inefficient. If you need to care about both then you need a clearly defined way to evaluate the trade-off.
Both the quietly of answers, and the predilection to close important questions is pronounced. I am posting here with a heavy heart to say that a platform which I truly loved has died.
This sort of dramatic rhetoric accomplishes nothing positive.
I don't think that 5 noobs to this platform should be able to close a question
If you cared about policy, you might have noticed that it has only taken three close votes, for years now.
Or that casting a vote to close requires 3000 reputation, which less than 100k user accounts have out of about 21.5 million. (The newest such account appears to have been created in August; verification is left as an exercise.)
But more importantly, please consider that "noobs" are capable of learning things, and some of them do so quickly.
posted by someone like myself.
Again, it has nothing to do with who you are.
You must ask a question that meets standards, and you do not get special privileges in this regard due to your reputation, account age, subject matter expertise or anything else like that.
Ideally, being who you are should result in asking better questions. But that also requires you to put in the effort to understand the standards.
If you imagine that you should be exempt from this then you have fundamentally misunderstood both the community we are trying to build and the goal we are trying to achieve. If anything, we are actively trying to reject the attitudes you express here.
I asked an important question, that needs an answer.
Respectfully, I disagree.
If we can't find experts here, then the only option I have is ChatGPT, and all of this is really sad.
There are still experts here. For example, I can tell you things about the inner workings of Python that very few Pythonistas understand. For that matter, the list of people "last seen this week" includes many people I recognize as past "heroes" of the site, members of the Python dev team, well-known Microsoft employees and dev bloggers, etc. etc. etc.
Please feel free to use ChatGPT as a search engine. (If you are the expert you present yourself as, then you should well understand that it literally does not know what it is saying and all claims in its output require separate verification.)