If the new question doesn't differ from the old question, it should be closed as duplicate.
The fact the old question doesn't receive new updated answers doesn't mean a new question should be asked: An old question that has not been closed can always be answered. I answered some old questions, reporting what the actual situation is, and my answer was up-voted, and accepted from the OP.
The difference is that, eventually, new answers for the old questions are not accepted from who asked the question, but future readers will read the new information the same. An accepted answer is just the answer that helped the OP more than the other answers; the fact an answer has been accepted doesn't mean it is necessarily the most correct answer. In fact, I have seen accepted answers with a negative score.
If a user wants to have updated answers for a question asked from somebody else, s/he can offer a bounty for the question. Alternatively, s/he should ask a new question making clear in what the new question is different from the existing one.
Take the following two questions as example:
- What Drupal module can I use for [description of the task to achieve]?
- What Drupal module can I use for [description of the task to achieve]? I have looked at [link to the previous question], but I cannot use any of the modules suggested in the answers there because [explanation].
The second question says the OP cannot use the modules suggested for the other question, which means it has more restrictive requirements about the modules to use.
If a question is asking the same thing asked by another question, and it is not putting restrictions about the acceptable answers, then it should be closed as duplicate, independently from when the previous question was asked.