This question is probably more interesting than you realized when you asked it. About a year ago, we looked at every _single_ image that was blocked due to this restriction (we log each  incident), and the results were interesting:

 - 99% of everything blocked was benign, just screen shots, diagrams - what you'd expect.
 - The 1% that wasn't benign was _really_ awful. 

We then took a look at the stuff that was 'normal' (in a sense that it wasn't porn, Hitler, Hitler porn, or the like). About a third of it was:

 - A screen shot of someone's code in their IDE instead of code being put in the question and formatted
 - A photocopy or picture of a text book or assignment
 - A picture of a broken web site, with little to no other text accompanying it

While it's labeled to prevent abuse, it has the added side effect of helping _quite a few_ people have a better initial experience on the site by insisting that which should be text is actually text, and that at least a _modicum_ of effort is put into explaining the problem. Yes, people can still ask bad questions, but this puts the breaks on several really _bad_ categories of them.

You can link to, or provide the URL for any _supplementary_ information, photos, diagrams, screen shots, etc - but the keyword there is _supplementary_. If it weren't for the restriction, folks would be a bit more inclined to get that wrong, and much more likely to have a miserable experience subsequently. 

In short, we examined the possibility of loosening or removing the restriction, but found that doing so wouldn't be a very good idea - just for reasons quite different than we anticipated :)