it seems it might just be a "recommendation" though... I'll admit to not having read up on W3C stuff... but have read a lot of RFCs... and there's differences between may/should/must etc...
@JonClements Agree 100% on "must/should" etc. The thing is, this is specifically in the context of accessibility which many of us (at least me) don't often think about.
Yes, I think lots of accessibility questions are essentially about best practices. Perhaps that's the category that successfully threads the needle through the caveats in the meta answer
@MattB. Before specs were created it 100% was just about best practices. Now that there are specs to follow (and in some cases, decisions in court about compliance), it's very much not an opinion-based matter... so long as it is phrased that way.
I'm not sure if in most cases the questions just need to be rephrased or if they truly are about opinions
I have seen more than a few pure-design questions masquerading as accessibility ones
@Dharman not particularly; if anything in their current states that Q should be duped of the more recent one; it references recommendations from some random website, whereas the more recent one at least references W3C content.
I may provide a WCAG-based answer to the 2018 later if I have time.
I'm also out of CVs so can't hammer either direction at the moment.
@TylerH Rather than "Is there a", which is a yes/no question, I would suggest something along the lines of "What is a", which asks for the actual information (or "How can I implement X in a"). Also to be avoided is "Where can I find", which is the resource request issue.
@TylerH Yes, but answering a yes/no question with "yes" or "no" is a valid answer, even if not all that helpful. It's not a valid answer if you're asking for "What is".
@TylerH Yes, and no. It's still going to get flags, and still isn't nearly as useful as "What is". Note that I didn't say it was specifically off-topic, I said it's an issue, which it is, and will continue to be throughout the life of the question.
@Vickel While that may be something that we individually consider abusive of the people that wrote the software/site, it's not really something SO considers as "rude or abusive". R/A is primarily about being rude or abusive here on SO. While I'm not 100% clear on what the question is really asking, "cracking" is something that's a legal issue in any particular legal jurisdiction.
@Makyen what triggered me was "can do it Smart School M S for making free to end of life and make changes on back-end codes to remove restriction", but maybe I just misread/interpreted the whole post. Thanks for your input, as always!
@Vickel I'm not really sure what they are asking. I think they are asking for help cracking software. While I can make a good argument that it is rude/abusive to the people who wrote the code, and by extension everyone involved in creating and distributing software, it's not something that's R/A flaggable.