I asked this question on unix.SE, which turns out to be basically a duplicate of this SU question. Both sites are considered equally valid (although I'd rather see these questions on unix than on SU) for the question, but were both questions on the same site mine would most likely be closed as a duplicate. Migrating either question is against common sense since neither is off-topic, but that is currently the only way to close as duplicates. I therefore request:

Allow to close questions that are on-topic on multiple site to be duplicate-closed without requiring senseless migration

Examples (please expand if you have some):


Side-note: I consider this quite different from the Close as cross-post request (closed as duplicate of the link to cross-posts request for some reason), since a cross-post is the same question asked on multiple site on purpose to get potentially different answers. This request is however about being able to close a question as an accidental duplicate to another question that may actually already have "the" answer.

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Whoah, quick downvotes :-/ Any reason other than the "Different communities may yield different answers" one? If the author of the question in question themselves realizes the question doesn't need another answer, why should it remain open instead of encouraging a redirected user from the one community to add their valuable information to the other community's question? – Tobias Kienzler Oct 17 '12 at 18:47
It's too extreme of an edge case to worry about. – Robert Harvey Oct 17 '12 at 19:02
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@RobertHarvey Because I only named the one example I experienced myself? I'm sure there are more, although I admit they (should) only pose a small percentage. I mean I wouldn't call it critical, but it is a broken window nonetheless. – Tobias Kienzler Oct 17 '12 at 19:04
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I don't think cross-site duplicates is a valid concept. I've seen people claim that a question should be closed because it has already been answered somewhere else on the SE network, but it's really a baseless claim; questions are only duplicates if they are duplicates on the site in which they were asked. – Robert Harvey Oct 17 '12 at 19:15
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If you find a situation like that, inform the OP. At best they could add a link into their post for others to see. And if they were to implement such a dupe closure, it should not affect any possible post-ban. After all, we can't expect the OP to do a cross-site search for dupes. – Bart Oct 17 '12 at 19:16
Nor should we expect a casual observer to search the entire network for an answer to their question, if it clearly belongs on one particular SE site. – Robert Harvey Oct 17 '12 at 19:21
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@Robert I'm not sure I follow your argument. If I ask a Wordpress question on Stack Overflow that has a good dupe on Wordpress.SE, why should it be answered anew on SO instead of dupe-closed? That stuff happens all the time and the only solution currently is to flag the dupe for migration to WP.SE. Wouldn't it be better for the question to stick around on the original site for the next asker to find? – Pekka 웃 Oct 18 '12 at 8:26
No one should be expected to actively look through all sister sites that might contain dupes. But if an answered dupe happens to be found, and the questions do obviously not "clearly [belong] on one particular SE site", to quote @RobertHarvey, then the current system - either leaving both open, or migrating despite on-topicness just to dupe-close (although the automatic redirection fortunately skips this) - is flawed – Tobias Kienzler Oct 18 '12 at 8:32
@Bart I agree you cannot ask anyone searching for cross-dupes, but what do you mean by post-ban? – Tobias Kienzler Oct 18 '12 at 8:32
@tobias Users who ask particularly bad questions can be automatically banned from asking further questions. We don't know exactly what the algorithm is, but having your questions closed does seem to count against you. Having this all affected by a question of yours being closed for a dupe on another site seems unfair. – Bart Oct 18 '12 at 8:47
@Bart Ah yes, that should of course not be held against one, agreed – Tobias Kienzler Oct 18 '12 at 8:56
@Pekka Thanks for the agreement. Please feel free to add some examples if you happen to stumble upon some, that would probably strenghen our position – Tobias Kienzler Oct 18 '12 at 9:22

2 Answers

This sounds like an extremely rare edge case, one that doesn't really justify a new feature.

How about you either delete your question from Unix & Linux, or close it (with some help from the moderators) and just point to the duplicate on SU? You can easily emulate the duplicate message:

Possible Duplicate:
Using Multiple SSH Public Keys (on Super User)

If you think your question must stay on Unix & Linux and point at the Super User duplicate at the same time, that's a simple enough solution, isn't it?

Or, you know, since it's on topic on Unix & Linux just let it stay there. You can even compose an answer based on the answers on Super User (referencing them, obviously) and accept it. It won't guarantee that new users won't show up, but it will significantly lower the visibility of the question, while at the same time referencing the duplicate on Super User.

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It's not a rare edge case. It happens all the time for example in the Wordpress tag on Stack Overflow. – Pekka 웃 Oct 18 '12 at 8:26

Different Q&A sites are different. A question can be on-topic on multiple sites at the same time. There wouldn't be different Stack Exchange sites if they were meant to be one single forum.

Hence, it is not a duplicate post if it is on-topic on, say, SuperUser and a similar question already exists on ServerFault. They are different sites.

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Well, that's exactly why the OP is suggesting this feature, isn't it? – Pekka 웃 Oct 18 '12 at 8:24
@Pekka: Maybe he means they're just not to be closed if they're on-topic. – Nikana Reklawyks Nov 9 '12 at 0:39

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