I've been trawling unanswered jsoup questions for a while and have been disturbed to find several instances of users asking the same question multiple times. In one case, the user asked the same question four days in a row. The question text was not exactly the same -- the user's example changed and the fourth question replaced the example with "pleas help" -- but the questions are undeniably duplicates.
When I see self-duplicates, I flag all but one as the duplicate of the one with the best answers (if any), then downvote that one. I've never seen a case that doesn't deserve a downvote on its merits even without the self-duplication; if the question was good, the user wouldn't need to re-ask it to get an answer. (I'd downvote all the self-duplicates if serial downvoting was permitted.)
But I think we could educate these users in a better way, hopefully one that prevents the duplicate(s), encourages users to improve their existing question, and doesn't add to the close votes queue. Failing that, perhaps a ban/throttle will train them to treat their questions as a valuable resource.
The obvious technical measure has been implemented: if a user tries to post a precisely-identical question, the question is rejected. But such users are already ignoring the "these questions may already have an answer" and "similar questions" boxes showing the duplicate, so the filter only force them to misspell a word (or maybe more, not sure how tight the filter is). This doesn't help much.
I don't have any better ideas at this point, hence discussion.
Is there anything we can do about this behavior, either user education (that reposting is not an acceptable way to get eyeballs on your question) or punishment (with a question-ban or throttle)? I'd much prefer education, but it's not clear how to reach those users. I did see one user (the example above) with two sets of self-duplicate questions, and a ban/throttle may have prevented the second, but in general the kinds of users who post self-duplicates aren't invested enough in the site to ask more than one set.
Related: this meta.se post from 2010, which just asked why anyone would do such a thing, without proposing to do anything about it.