###No.



Here's why: ultimately, these are customer support questions.  Only Apple can answer them in an authoritative way, because they make the rules; rules which, by their own admission, can change at any time without warning.  Consequently, any attempt by a non-employee to answer such questions inevitably leads to idly speculative answers like "I tried that once in my app, and it got accepted," relegating such questions to the moral equivalent of polls and highly-localized speculative opinions.

The only real reason that people direct these questions to anyone else but Apple is a consequence of the same effect that is felt at any large company like Apple or Facebook: either their customer support sucks, or people just assume that their customer support sucks. Even if it didn't, there is a vast mountain of questions that are asked by people that are not really qualified to ask them, questions which Apple probably feels they shouldn't have to answer.

And neither should we.

I'm philosophically opposed to any range of questions that acts as a proxy for some company's customer support, if for no other reason than the company should be handling the problem themselves. Taking the pressure off by providing an alternative outlet only removes the incentive for these companies to clean up their own messes, and involves outsiders who are not qualified to answer the questions properly anyway.