We always ask members to specify variety, kit/fresh/frozen, and other important details, but sometimes that info is not presented up front. When that happens, we'll generally ask them for more info before an active discussion begins.
I think this particular thread, at least didn't start out as a degassing problem. The person tried to stop fermentation at an SG of 1.010. However, seems like a large percentage of questions involve degassing; always has, probably always will.
I was a bit surprised when Turock said the wine would degas on its own in secondary. Then we all got on the same page and realized he was writing about fresh/frozen grape wine and not kits.
I would say most of the threads involve kits wines, although since last Summer, we have been having lots more discussion about fresh grape wine making and I have enjoyed this part very much. It is a lot more challenging with all the extra steps and chemicals, which for kits it is taken care of as a part of the manufacturing process of the kit.
Kit wines really don't degas well on their own; many times I have left kit wine a full year in the carboy and under an air lock, but the wine never degassed well. However, some of that is likely because the temperature where my wine is stored is 56F to 64F, which is not warm enough to degas well. Still, kits just don't degas easily on their own.
I find I have to degas at the normal time per instructions, then degas again, just to make sure..., just before I bottle. I can do this without introducing more air into the wine at bottling because I use a vacuum pump for degassing. Admittedly, I have a heck of a time getting all the gas out.
I generally leave my wine in a carboy for a year. Nowadays, the first six months of that is under an air lock, the last under a solid bung. (In the past I kept the wine under an air lock the whole time.) Either way, for kit wines, not surprising, I sometimes still get some CO2 bubbles at that last degassing. Ugh!