Hello there rbarnes.
Unfortunately there's no simple answer, sometimes a monitoring error may be a symptom for something else. Getting an SNMP error when trying to monitor bandwidth can mean that something is wrong as the device isn't responding to SNMP requests, could a firewall be blocking traffic, could it be that the SNMP Agent on the device failed? If so, why? Investigation will always be required when dealing with this kind of information.
When your admins receive an alert, say for instance an WMI Error saying that the memory is down, it's possible to quickly reach the device's overview within PRTG and compare the down sensor with other sensors, having sensors with multiple protocols (WMI, SNMP, ICMP) will allow you to better analyze if this is a "real issue" or a "monitoring issue".
A locked ssh account should also not happen "by itself", it means that something change/was modified in the environment, if someone intends to modify something in the environment which may trigger alerts, people need to be warned/alerted first, it's even possible to pause the respective sensors in PRTG to prevent alerts immediately after the change.
Some monitoring protocols are also less error-prone, you shoud always use SNMP or other Low or Very-Low performance-impact sensors, Sensors with a Higher Performance impact tend to be more error prone. Having your PRTG Server set-up tidy also helps avoiding false alarms.
Best Regards,
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