My reasoning applies for the situation at hand, where the inquirer obviously isn't adhering to the principle since they're asking. Now the person answering the question should respond with the principle in mind, but if the only people saying "don't ask about it" are non-virgins, the outcome is the same, the inquirer got the info they needed, just not in a "yes" or "no" fashion
I know it's an islamic concept to not engage in publicizing sins. Does it occur to you that responding in the way the sheik recommends, could still be seen as disclosing sins? Today there may be an argument that it's not, since it's not explicitly stated, but the way language is used changes generation to generation. In 100 yrs, it could be common knowledge that "Allah said don't ask about this!" Is something stated only by non-virgins. Islam doesn't change, but the people and societies do, and this creates nuances. Burying your head in the sand and thinking "I am the Muslim following islam the right way, the other Muslims arent" isn't special / insightful