To be specific about an issue, I think that the duplicate tag is applied too loosely. It's very discouraging to come to Stack Overflow, search for your answer, not find it, ask a question, and get it labelled duplicate even though it's not a duplicate. There are many times when it's justified (probably the majority), but quite a few where it's not. This seems like one of the canonical posts on the subject: How does duplicate closing work? When is a question a duplicate, and how should duplicate questions be handled?How does duplicate closing work? When is a question a duplicate, and how should duplicate questions be handled?. This link seems to imply a much more lenient benefit-of-the-doubt policy than what is currently employed. Consider this quote:
It depends. If a question is an exact duplicate, then go ahead and (vote to) close it. However, note that questions may be similar without being exact duplicates:
The word exact is pretty strong IMHO, suggesting that if the question is in the grey zone, it should not be closed.
Unfortunately, the current mechanism has a bit of the opposite tendency built in. 30 people with close privileges can see a question; 25 don't think it should be closed, but they don't want to answer, and 5 think it should be closed. The 5 vote to close, and it's closed. Then you need to gather people to vote to re-open which isn't easy.
I don't know what mechanism exactly would solve this. I do think though that if a question that's marked duplicate is re-opened, there should be a loss of reputation. If you lose reputation for writing a sloppy question or sloppy answer (as perceived by other people), why shouldn't you lose reputation for sloppily closing a question (as perceived by other people). Similar mechanisms should apply for other grounds for closing a question (too broad, opinion-based, etc.). This would at least give a small amount of incentive to not close incorrectly.