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Inspired from this meta question and my comment at Shog9's answer, I'm going to ask for that feature now:

I'd like to see an extension for the gold badge users of a particular tag, not only to be able to single-handedly close questions (aka the mighty mjölnir) as a [duplicate] but also for the close reasons that specifically rely on details of the (language) tag and knowledge about it.

In particular, I see the close vote reasons

  • Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers. See: How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example.
  • This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

Maybe for any close reason appearing at the off-topic because ... second level of detail, besides the custom and other side appliance close reasons, to be appropriate to be used single-handedly by a gold badge tag owner and level of trustworthiness.


I think such a feature could greatly improve to bail out VLQ questions for particular tags early, and reduce the overall noise.

I'm mostly trusting my peers, and if I have resilient doubts, I should be able to revert such a decision single-handedly as well (or it needs to get into the reopen queue as usual).

The power would be just to show stop any questions, that miss efforts to debug the tag-related errors with the obviously available tools (including Google, Bing, Yahoo answers, etc.).


Taking on from walfrat's comment, as I have mentioned missing efforts, it might need a certain condition as e.g. a threshold of downvotes, or question score (like there is for delete votes) to enable using the feature.


There's also this positively accepted feature-request brought by dasblinkenlight (who's certainly a trusted user) which goes closely along with mine.

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    Can we add too broad to the list? Jun 16, 2016 at 1:27
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    Actually, the 2 you mentioned I see are the most misused close reasons on the site, although I can't corrolate the misuse I've seen with gold badge holders. But regardless it should be all of none. I have a feeling users would pick the wrong close reason just to close the question. Better to just give them everything Jun 16, 2016 at 1:37
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    @psubsee2003 "Better to just give them everything " I'm afraid that's too much of powers. "Actually, the 2 you mentioned I see are the most misused close reasons on the site" can you point out any examples for evidence where these close resons are misused actually. Jun 16, 2016 at 1:43
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    @πάνταῥεῖ I'm afraid that's too much of powers but that's the point. Some (not all) users feel a question needs to be closed ASAP, so they will use the one that will give the insta-close powers instead of the more appropriate one. I have a pet peeve for wrong close reasons because they end up failing the original poster by not providing accurate feedback. I think letting the gold badge users choose the most appropriate reason is better than only giving them selective powers because there is less chance for abuse. Either we trust them to do it right or we don't. Jun 16, 2016 at 1:50
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    @psubsee2003: "I have seen common syntax error questions that can be made useful (and searchable) to get closed as typos." Are they actually typos? Because the most common syntax errors I get are typos. It's one thing if someone is clearly inventing a reason to close. It's quite another if you two simply disagree on whether a typo is really a typo. Jun 16, 2016 at 2:23
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    @psubsee2003: "a syntax error is not a typo for someone who doesn't understand the syntax." The reader of a question should not make close voting decisions based on the apparent skill level of the person asking the question. You vote based on the content of the question; nothing more. And if the content would be a typo from a 20k user, then it's a typo from a 1-rep user. Remember: we're not here to help the OP; we're here to help other people too. Jun 16, 2016 at 2:38
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    Related. This has been brought up before, without success. My suggestion is that gold badge close votes should be given more weight (i.e. worth 2 votes) when applied to the MCVE close reason. Jun 16, 2016 at 2:56
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    FWIW, the typo questions can be handled with the dupe hammer, given that all of the common typos have been asked and answered a hundred times. If there isn't a good dupe for a particular typo, you can always make a canonical Q&A for that, and then hammer away. Jun 16, 2016 at 3:06
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    @JonathanPotter without the knowledge of the technology, you might not know if the question can be just resolved with a google/SO search or not. Or worst, think it's an easy and lazy question when it's not really one.
    – Walfrat
    Jun 16, 2016 at 7:23
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    If it seems to much of power for one gold tag user, maybe we could have a little restriction, like having 5 downvotes on the question ?
    – Walfrat
    Jun 16, 2016 at 7:25
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    I believe the technical term for what you are proposing is "pissing in the wind". There is simply too much ingrained skepticism on the part of some of the trustworthiness and judgment of gold badge holders. These people would rather see the site drown in fecal matter, and the experienced users flee the site, than speed up the closing of questions. We've been over this territory so often that it makes my head spin. We can keep discussing it until the cows come home. Someone needs to step up and make a policy decision, but I don't even know who that would be.
    – user663031
    Jun 16, 2016 at 8:03
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    @tora Maybe we could call Jeff Atwood and have him settle it? Jun 16, 2016 at 9:46
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    @Walfrat You are fundamentally confused about the difference in meaning between downvotes and closevotes.
    – user663031
    Jun 16, 2016 at 13:50
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    @Walfrat A question might deserve to be closed, for one of the specific reasons provided, none of which would justify a downvote. A question might be downvoted into oblivion, without any close reason being applicable. It's real important to distinguish between the two, and not conflate them into some murky "bad question" concept. Whether a question should be closed has nothing to do with how many upvotes or downvotes it has. It is closed for a specific close reason. The only question is, how many of what kind of people need to vote to close for which of those reasons.
    – user663031
    Jun 16, 2016 at 14:33
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    This long list of comments and discussion should be continued with some answers now. Jun 16, 2016 at 15:51

4 Answers 4

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Of the 5,372,568 users at Stack Overflow, there are only 3,058 users with gold tag badges

I think expansion is a good idea, because that was the original idea. I remember well, I authored it. It all started from this answer (in case you want to follow a lot of the discussion with regards to increased weight overall, and not just for duplicates which was the outcome then).

First, if we're gonna do this then let's make it worthwhile: 1 vote == closed, regardless of how many other votes or flags are in play. -Shog9

At the time of suggesting (May, 2014) the increased closure weight, Shog9 provided a set of statistics that perhaps everyone is not aware of so I will reproduce them here.

So... What if we had silently implemented this on Stack Overflow a year ago, and no one had altered their behavior...

  • 22,102 questions currently open with pending close votes would instead be closed.
  • 145,843 questions currently closed would have been closed faster and with less effort needed from other voters. 90,722 of these would have been closed with a single vote.
  • 34,837 questions currently open would have been closed instead of the vote aging away. Note that 11,677 of these went through review and were marked "Leave Open".
  • 2,677 questions would have been closed faster, but then reopened anyway.
  • 1,328 questions would have been reopened faster
  • 1,837 questions would have been reopened instead of the vote aging away. Note that 1,829 of these went through review and were marked "Leave Closed".
  • 1,071 questions would have been re-opened faster, but then closed again.

These statistics, although slightly dated, were composed through the lens of increasing weight to all closure votes. As is seen there is a clear advantage to faster closure with this process. As a result it would save time of users who should be answering and creating content instead of casting close votes; while it may not be immediately obvious, there is a cost to casting close votes and that does add up over time. Increasing the vote weight would offset that cost.

Furthermore, when officially acknowledging the dupehammer being implemented, Tim Post remarked

We're doing this for duplicates only to start, because it's incredibly silly not to do this. Not giving people with gold tag badges more abilities in their tags is just wasting some very valuable signal

Which is a clear indication that the dupehammer was just the start of an experiment which at this point has clearly panned out. There has not been any of the widespread abuse people feared. Tim goes on to state

This is being deployed initially as an experiment, I think there's enough sanity here to prevent most abuse cases, and we don't really have a very large rate of incorrect duplicates. If this pans out well, we might consider giving gold tag badge holders more weight in other areas

tl;dr; I fully support the expansion of close vote weight for gold tag badge holders. It was originally intended to be expanded, as shown. I don't think it should be limited to a subset of reasons. I understand that maybe just starting with a subset would be a good way to slowly roll this out and test. However, perhaps that would just force users into choosing the wrong close reasons for questions which should clearly be closed.

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    You have a point, I didn't realize we were so few. I'll do my best to be constructive about this. In a nutshell, I believe this situation gives us a legitimacy that may not be apparent to the lambda user (less apparent than a moderator's, in any case). For this to succeed, we should devise a way to convey this legitimacy to the lambda user. Mjölnir does that with a badge marker and a tooltip, and it's working quite well. However, it may be harder to generalize that message to all close reasons IMHO. We have to be careful about the signal we would be sending. Jun 16, 2016 at 20:10
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    "it would save time of users who should be answering and creating content instead of casting close votes; while it may not be immediately obvious, there is a cost to casting close votes" -- I agree 100% with this assertion, and it's a source of great frustration for me. It's just that authoritarianism is a sharp blade to be wielded carefully and judiciously. I feel that the "as duplicate" vote has clearly different characteristics from other close reasons, characteristics which easily mitigate what would otherwise create contentiousness in the community, as other close reasons would. Jun 16, 2016 at 20:28
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    It is not authoritarianism. Closure is not a permanent state. An individual police officer has broad jurisdiction to arrest you if he feels it is justified. That doesn't make it an authoritarian state; you still have rights. Namely, the right to habeas corpus. Our equivalent would be the Reopen Vote queue and auditing by other community members who happen by. We also have the option of flagging a moderator directly and asking them to instantly override the decision of the close-voter. In other words, I don't get all the hand-wringing about the possibility for abuse. Jun 17, 2016 at 6:19
  • @Cody: I am less worried about actual abuse, than I am about perceived abuse. The former is not good, but as you point out less likely and has a mechanism, albeit not necessarily discoverable to the neophyte, for appeal. The latter is just straight-up corrosive to the cohesiveness of the community. In some cases, it's worth risking that because the benefit is so great. But I'm just not seeing the scales tip that way here. Jun 17, 2016 at 6:48
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    @PeterDuniho Yes, the abuse of badly answering bad and straight off-topic questions is too great. Jun 17, 2016 at 10:03
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    From SEDE there are (from when this data was created, so slightly out of date) 5,418 gold tag badges spread around 3,058 unique users.
    – DavidG
    Jun 18, 2016 at 2:12
  • @Deduplicator: do you know of any source where your thesis is represented in an objective form supported by data? (for those of us; who less moved by emotional appeals) Shog9's posts could used as examples.
    – jfs
    Jun 18, 2016 at 23:49
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This answer is to address a specific point in @Peter Duniho's answer.

Second, and IMHO most important, when a question is closed as a duplicate, the author of the question actually receives real help.

When I see a question that's missing a MCVE, it's in the question author's best interest that their question is closed as quickly as possible.

This might sound counterintuitive, so let me explain.

When a question/issue can't be reproduced there is a tendency for anyone who views the question to downvote it and leave (because many users can't or won't vote).

The asker is then burdened by what are essentially undue downvotes the longer their question remains open. If I can instantly vote-close a question, the asker knows exactly who to have a discussion with once they've made the appropriate updates.

If the asker has received 4 or 5 downvotes, there's a much lower chance that they're going to be willing to try to fix their own post, because it'll take more effort to revert those votes just to be positive.

This puts the asker in a better place to make changes to their question and have it reopened.

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  • That is a really good point. Often when I find a question that is problematic I have tried to engage with the OP only to find no response. Increased attentiveness as a side effect here would be a massive advantage.
    – Travis J
    Jun 17, 2016 at 20:27
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Yes, OK, but let's go further.

No doubt the close review queue is too big and it's very ineffective to close questions (the few and brave people that review scatter their votes around on different questions and this makes their work just age away).

SE certainly needs to address this problem sooner or later if they still want to keep the feature that questions can/should be closed (I guess SE is currently mostly relying on the roomba for the clean-up effort).

I understand that gold badgers like to close and reopen as they please, and this would be OK for me but I really do not think this will solve the problem. Do the gold badgers today already close all duplicate questions? Or are there only a few that put their effort into finding duplicates and closing them?

Furthermore, in low-traffic tags there are no or very few gold badges and flagging or close voting questions in these tags is fairly hopeless.

In my opinion SO needs to address this problem in a much wider way not only using gold badgers.

I have no direct solution today but I have seen many different suggestions, such as close vote weight depending on tag badges (I think the basic idea was from Tunaki). For example

Gold badge   - 1 cv, counts as 4 cv
Silver badge - 1 cv, counts as 3 cv
Bronze badge - 1 cv, counts as 2 cv

and probably this should be scaled depending on traffic in tags.

So my 2 cents to your request is:

SE needs to address this problem in a much wider way than just relying on gold hammers, creating commitment and involvement from the whole community, probably re-thinking what is needed to close a question and how the close review queue filters and displays questions.

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    Weights for close votes is also an interesting idea, though these should be restricted to the tag relevant close reasons. Jun 18, 2016 at 0:20
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I really want to support this idea. I really do. I hate all the bad questions that show up, and I hate the number of other people who will jump to attempt to answer the bad questions, on the off-chance that they might get some up-votes, even when they aren't even really sure what the question is, and I hate the people who do up-vote such answers, not because the answer addresses the question per se, but because it's a good answer to some question.

The faster we could close questions that lead to these outcomes, the better.

But I think there are a couple of fundamental differences in the close reasons that strongly argue to preserve the gold badge privilege as it is today.

First, closing as duplicate is about as close to a purely objective close reason as one can get, and requires that the person closing the post make some genuine effort to document and justify their decision. Even there, people whine. They argue that their question isn't a duplicate, only because they aren't proficient enough to understand why they do have fundamentally the same problem and do need exactly the same resolution to their problem, as is found in the duplicate target. But the duplicate is right there in black & white for all to see. And if it's not a duplicate, that will be obvious as well, and the community can quickly reverse the mistaken closure.

Second, and IMHO most important, when a question is closed as a duplicate, the author of the question actually receives real help. To me, this is a critical element in the balancing of the powers of the gold badge holder. Closing the question not only improves the quality of the site, but it also produces a positive result for the author of the question.

Other close reasons are really just rejections. Do we trust gold badge holders? Yes, of course. But we should be very careful when we exercise outright rejection. Rejections hurt, no matter how much one might rightly argue that one should take constructive criticism in stride. Requiring plural support from the community helps validate such rejections, makes sure that rejections are well-deserved, and reinforces the message such rejection might send to the author of the post.

It's very easy to ignore the opinion of one person, even if they have the gold badge. It's a lot harder when five or more people have expressed the same opinion.

By restricting the single-handed closure power to the close reason that is reasonably objective and especially to the one that can actually help the author of the post solves their problem, we will minimize the fallout that would otherwise occur from the closure of a person's question, while at the same time helping to keep the basic community mood on the positive side by minimizing the amount of direct one-on-one conflict.

So, I have to say, my vote is "no" on this idea. As much as I want to have more freedom to help get rid of the bad questions, I think there are strong reasons to continue to restrict the gold badge privilege as it is today.

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    I upvoted your answer, even if your final conclusion goes against my proposal. Discussion and arguing in depth about such feature was what I was looking for. Jun 16, 2016 at 16:55
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    Also: "the author of the question actually receives real help", Doesn't enforcing them to create a MCVE help actually? Most of such problems could be identified and fixed when doing so. Jun 16, 2016 at 17:10
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    Well, what about at least making gold-badgers count simply count more? Jun 16, 2016 at 18:05
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    Meh. A moderator named CasperOne used to camp the newest page and single vote close off topic questions all the time. It was great. All it did was allow users with genuine questions more of an opportunity to get their question answered by someone actually taking their time. 5 Gold Tag badge users voting to close a question from a 1 reputation user that has a -6 score is a freaking awful waste of time; the cost of those close votes is very high at that point.
    – Travis J
    Jun 16, 2016 at 18:38
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    @Travis, that's an excellent example. Why is Casper not a moderator anymore? Why are they far less active on Meta than they used to be? Why were they the first (and almost only) moderator I regularly saw taking tremendous amounts of flak from everywhere at once? Their diamond did not protect them. Us gold badge holders don't even have one. Jun 16, 2016 at 19:24
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    @Travis, yup, I'm implying causation. Maybe I was not clear enough -- at one point CasperOne was routinely singled out amongst moderators because he (I think he's a guy) camped the newest questions page and one-handedly closed all the crap he found there. He was a moderator, with all the legitimacy to do that, yet there was a lot of blood and tears because people just threw that legitimacy out of the window. There is even a Quora article with his name on it. Gold badge holders would not last a week. Jun 16, 2016 at 19:35
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    @FrédéricHamidi - One Quora post with 7 SO post links and an answer stating that the posts should have been closed is not exactly supporting your argument. This reads more as fear mongering than actual evidence, especially your claim that Gold badge holders would somehow not last a week. Where is the evidence for that?
    – Travis J
    Jun 16, 2016 at 19:41
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    Fear mongering? Wow. Okay, you win, go ahead with this feature if you want. I was only reminiscing things you may not have noticed back then, but I can't spend my evening hunting for the last remaining "evidence" on the Overmeta. If this feature is implemented, time will have to tell (but don't say I didn't warn you :) Jun 16, 2016 at 19:48
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    @π: ...really shouldn't have been posted in the first place (often because they are too basic) can be adequately answered without one. It is most often my opinion these questions should be closed due to poor quality, but there's ample evidence many others disagree. Most moderators answer to the community, through the democratic selection process. Gold badge holders closing questions that could be answered but which shouldn't be on the site are just going to lead to intra-community disputes. "Doesn't enforcing them to create a MCVE help actually?" -- only if the question cannot be answered... Jun 16, 2016 at 20:18
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    I see your point, but I respectfully disagree with it. We don't wish to clutter the site up with questions that are nothing more than "it doesn't work" or "why doesn't this work" when they miss a fairy obvious semicolon that any self-respecting compiler/interpreter would catch.
    – Makoto
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:05
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    Ah, I see you haven't seen the raw, unfiltered Android tags. Or PHP. Or Java. Or C#. I mean, those sorts of questions are asked all the time, and while anecdotally it's not comforting to hear it just off the cuff, most anyone who's spent some time in those question tags would understand. It isn't a huge amount, but we as professionals need to draw a line in the sand someplace.
    – Makoto
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:14
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    @Frédéric Wow, that's a good point. I had completely forgotten about the plight of poor CasperOne. I was around for that, when he was called out at least once a week on Meta for being tyrannical or some such nonsense. I guess no one wants to stand against all that pressure for very long. As far as this happening to gold tag-badge holders, I think the effect would be much diminished just because of sheer volume. It wouldn't be the same guy with his name attached to all the closed questions, which would take away the air of suspicion. All close-voters take ire, but you can't fix that. Jun 17, 2016 at 6:25
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    I just don't agree with that part of your answer, then. The bulk of closures now happen by community effort, but we get tons of "questions" on Meta from people who complain that their question was closed by a gang of 5 petty tyrants. Having 4 other people's names up there doesn't really shield you from much abuse or criticism. And that's only the criticism that people have the intestinal fortitude to post here on Meta. There's tons more shade being thrown around about us close-voters and moderators on other sites, like Reddit and people's personal blogs. Jun 17, 2016 at 7:06
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    @PeterDuniho - While dated, I am not sure if you are properly interpreting the statistics there. You state Even accounting for the age of the analysis, I don't see a strong potential for percentage-wise improvement in the closure rate., however a whopping 40% of closure would have happened with 1 vote instead of 5 votes. To me, that is a massive improvement.
    – Travis J
    Jun 17, 2016 at 9:09

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