As Gaming grows, we're seeing a big increase in duplicate questions from new users. This puts us in a bind, because while we certainly want to close the duplicates, doing so can have a negative impact on whether those users choose to continue with the site. It seems like everyone would be better off if we could prevent those duplicate questions before they were even asked.

The "Similar Questions" feature aims to do this, but because it is passive, a new user to the site is unlikely to notice it and/or understand its implications. Could we add something that if there is a question that is very likely a duplicate of the one about to be asked, new users would get a popup indicating that we think there question has already been asked, and linking them to the duplicate instead? (This would obviously be dependent on how well we can detect duplicates automatically. Utilizing the tags on the question would help immensely for sites like Gaming)

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+1 Google Mapmaker does this already, very useful feature. Make sure it's fine-tuned to show a few relevant results, not a whole bunch of them--which everyone will just skip. – Manishearth Mar 28 '12 at 15:30
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+1 - Given the lesser focus on code and more on text (with potentially more specific keywords) I could see this working much better on gaming.se than it would on SO. – cdeszaq Mar 28 '12 at 15:47
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The "Similar questions" functionality isn't very good until the user has typed in the body of the question. It is unlikely you could get a reliable match until the user finished at least part of the body. How would you expect this to work? Would the popup appear when they hit "submit?" – Robert Harvey Mar 28 '12 at 15:47
@Robert Yes, I was figuring this would happen when they clicked Submit. At the point we have the whole text and all the tags, giving us the best opportunity to correctly spot a duplicate. I know it isn't the friendliest thing to have a popup at that point (after they've done all their typing), but I think it is better than letting them ask the question and then closing it immediately. – bwarner Mar 28 '12 at 16:35
@RobertHarvey - The current "Similar questions" functionality could be made to update as the user is typing in a more "in your face" fashion if there is a particularly strong match, or perhaps the "visual strength" of a suggestion could increase as the user types and the match gets stronger. – cdeszaq Mar 28 '12 at 16:40

2 Answers

This puts us in a bind, because while we certainly want to close the duplicates, doing so can have a negative impact on whether those users choose to continue with the site.

Why in the world would closing questions as a duplicate have a negative impact on whether users want to continue? Their question has already been answered before they even had to ask it. Talk about awesome. It's like your site can read their mind. They get [nearly] immediate answers to their question that have already been vetted by the community without even having to wait. I fail to see how this is anything but a positive experience.

Besides, if you really think the fact that a question is closed as a duplicate is somehow an off-putting experience, then how is an "aggressive duplicate prevention" system going to be any less off-putting?

The pop-up that they'd see when trying to submit the question would be not only annoying and increase user friction, but unless it was impossible to dismiss (which is a really bad idea for imperfect algorithms, and this is the kind of thing you just can't get to be perfect), wouldn't keep them from submitting the possibly duplicate question anyway. And in that case, you'd just have to go through the routine of voting to close it as a duplicate anyway.

It's much better to have an actual human read the question, understand it, and propose a duplicate. Then to have other actual humans (4 of them) do the same thing.

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Closing is a negative experience, regardless of how it is spun. From their point of view, the new user has had their hand slapped by the moderators for doing something wrong. A user actually has to participate in the site for some time before they "get it" and realize that having a question get closed is not a bad thing. – Jason Berkan Mar 28 '12 at 16:57
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@Jason: That seems non-responsive to the issues I raise in my answer. First of all, as you say, new users don't have a baseline by which to measure what is positive or negative. There's no particular reason to assume that being pointed to a question that already contains the answers to their question is a bad thing. It's not a "hand slap" unless you tell them it's a hand slap. Second, if it is a hand slap, then why in the world would it be any less negative for a message to come up that says, in effect, "You cannot post this question as it's a duplicate of another question already asked"? – Cody Gray Mar 28 '12 at 16:59
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I don't know if the proposed solution is good or not. I was just taking issue with the "closing is not negative" statement. While true, I have found that is not the way new users think. I make (or made, when I had the time) a conscious effort to ensure all new users on Gaming that have a question closed get a good comment explaining why it is closed and what they should do next. – Jason Berkan Mar 28 '12 at 17:05
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@JasonBerkan: if a user cannot understand the importance of Closing as a Duplicate, you do not want them participating on your Q&A site. They likely have mistaken it for a forum. – sixlettervariables Mar 28 '12 at 17:27
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@sixlettervariables - Sorry, but that is far too rude of an attitude for me. I want new users on the site - there are large sections of the gaming community that are not represented on Gaming SE. Slapping their hand and then being rude to them is certainly going to send them away, ne'er to return. – Jason Berkan Mar 28 '12 at 17:33
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@JasonBerkan: some people aren't actually looking for SE, and that's Ok. It does not make sense to suspend the rules because new people might not understand them (or misunderstand it as a negative). – sixlettervariables Mar 28 '12 at 17:35
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@sixlettervariables - I'm not certain anyone is talking about suspending any rules - duplicates are duplicates and I VTC them. bwarner just wants a better automatic way to hit new users in the face with a duplicate before it gets posted (and then closed). – Jason Berkan Mar 28 '12 at 17:38
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@JasonBerkan: they will still ask their duplicate question (just phrase it differently), or worse, a non-duplicate will be blocked. Humans closing as a duplicate is the only accurate approach. (perhaps I should rephrase "suspending rules" to "automating intentionally manual processes") – sixlettervariables Mar 28 '12 at 17:42

If a question is very nearly exactly duplicate, and the canonical question is upvoted and has a selected answer, then close it as a dupe. This ensures searchers are pointed to a great answer.

Otherwise, leave it alone. Who cares if it's kind of sort of a dupe? Besides, you should stop worrying and love dupes.

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