True, it happens more often than it should.
It just feels weird to me, most likely because my own perception of GitHub as a work tool — not a tool for communicating with my customers.
It's kinda like if you go to a restaurant and you're served a crappy meal, and then go
inside the kitchen, move in front of the prep table, and then start complaining about your meal to the cooks.
It's absolutely your right to complain, and the complaint can also be productive for the cook to improve.
But you just don't do it in the restaurant kitchen.
Now, closing the issue can also be seen as a kind of censorship.
People might take offence and being annoying elsewhere, making the whole situation worse.
Looking at it, there are about 100 comments, most of them happened before the Deck was announced.
I don't know if anyone from Valve was observing the issue, but it was definitely serving its purpose appropriately.
Then the Deck shows up, and
all the comments turn into discussions about the Deck.
I guess if it was me, I'd probably just wait for those people to move elsewhere (which... is kind of the modus operandi of Valve since the beginning of time
).