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Tomerikoo
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How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote all duplicates and the original if it deserves so.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong (they might think that closed == deleted). Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

  4. If this is a recurring behaviorIf this is a recurring behavior, i.e. as your example of 4 questions in a short amount of time, or alternatively a few cases of duplicating questions for the same user - use the moderator flag to bring the attention to the moderators. Make sure to explain in detail the reason (we don't want to waste their time). They will make sure to explain the situation to the specific user, and suspend or take further steps if deem necessary.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to follow the above steps to make them know this behavior is unacceptable, and possibly direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

  4. If this is a recurring behavior, i.e. as your example of 4 questions in a short amount of time, or alternatively a few cases of duplicating questions for the same user - use the moderator flag to bring the attention to the moderators. Make sure to explain in detail the reason (we don't want to waste their time). They will make sure to explain the situation to the specific user, and suspend or take further steps if deem necessary.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to follow the above steps to make them know this behavior is unacceptable, and possibly direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote all duplicates and the original if it deserves so.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong (they might think that closed == deleted). Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

  4. If this is a recurring behavior, i.e. as your example of 4 questions in a short amount of time, or alternatively a few cases of duplicating questions for the same user - use the moderator flag to bring the attention to the moderators. Make sure to explain in detail the reason (we don't want to waste their time). They will make sure to explain the situation to the specific user, and suspend or take further steps if deem necessary.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to follow the above steps to make them know this behavior is unacceptable, and possibly direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

added 529 characters in body
Source Link
Tomerikoo
  • 19.4k
  • 3
  • 41
  • 77

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

  4. If this is a recurring behavior, i.e. as your example of 4 questions in a short amount of time, or alternatively a few cases of duplicating questions for the same user - use the moderator flag to bring the attention to the moderators. Make sure to explain in detail the reason (we don't want to waste their time). They will make sure to explain the situation to the specific user, and suspend or take further steps if deem necessary.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to follow the above steps to make them know this behavior is unacceptable, and possibly direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

  4. If this is a recurring behavior, i.e. as your example of 4 questions in a short amount of time, or alternatively a few cases of duplicating questions for the same user - use the moderator flag to bring the attention to the moderators. Make sure to explain in detail the reason (we don't want to waste their time). They will make sure to explain the situation to the specific user, and suspend or take further steps if deem necessary.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to follow the above steps to make them know this behavior is unacceptable, and possibly direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

added 14 characters in body
Source Link
Tomerikoo
  • 19.4k
  • 3
  • 41
  • 77

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is important to direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

How should I handle this?

Personally I would:

  1. Flag/close the newer question(s) as duplicate of the first one from the bunch.

  2. Down-vote.

  3. Leave a comment with a link to the other question(s) indicating the user is "recycling". It should be phrased in such a way that will both notify other users of the case, and also be constructive to the OP that might not be aware that they are actually doing something wrong. Something in the lines of:

    How is this question different from [this one](<link to question>) you asked some minutes ago? Please don't ask the same question twice. Instead, edit the original question with the missing details. If your edit was good enough, the question will get re-opened and you will get an answer.

Many new users get frustrated when their question is closed (for whatever reason) so instead of editing the question to be appropriate and maybe re-opened, they just ask a new one, sometimes exactly the same. Sometimes this system works, as other users might answer one of the questions instead of following the above steps so in the end OP will get their answer. Then they will probably keep doing it as it works.

It is therefore important to direct them to the appropriate help pages for instructions on how to write their questions properly to avoid them getting closed in the first place.

added 22 characters in body
Source Link
Tomerikoo
  • 19.4k
  • 3
  • 41
  • 77
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Source Link
Tomerikoo
  • 19.4k
  • 3
  • 41
  • 77
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Source Link
Tomerikoo
  • 19.4k
  • 3
  • 41
  • 77
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