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Makoto
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Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post within a week of which it is closed as a duplicate is seenflagged as abusepotentially abusive.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.

It is the case that some valid deletions do happen with dupe-closed questions, but this does give the moderation team a chance to ask questions and gather data about how often this is being done. If it's being done a lot and it's not desirable then that's a good place to start hashing it out.

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post within a week of which it is closed as a duplicate is seen as abuse.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post closed as a duplicate is flagged as potentially abusive.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.

It is the case that some valid deletions do happen with dupe-closed questions, but this does give the moderation team a chance to ask questions and gather data about how often this is being done. If it's being done a lot and it's not desirable then that's a good place to start hashing it out.

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Source Link
Makoto
  • 106.2k
  • 120
  • 864
  • 1.3k

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post within a week of which it is closed as a duplicate is seen as abuse.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post which is closed as a duplicate is seen as abuse.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post within a week of which it is closed as a duplicate is seen as abuse.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.
Source Link
Makoto
  • 106.2k
  • 120
  • 864
  • 1.3k

Maybe this is easier?

Any deletion of a post which is closed as a duplicate is seen as abuse.

My gut tells me that the root of this is that there is a crusade against duplicate posts and whether or not they should be visible on the site. Deleting them out of hand (that is to say, within less than a week of it being closed) explicitly goes against the advice or caution given for the privilege, and the fact that we're dealing with this seems like we should use this angle instead to control it.

This gives the moderators some clear backing and a clear path to go forward on.

  • You reinforce the message and policy that has already existed since time immemorial on content deletion.
  • You give Stack Exchange a chance (a chance) to deal with it at a higher level. Hey, they took time out to deal with community wikis; maybe they'll bother about this one?
  • The people who do abuse this start making themselves more and more visible, making it easier and easier to deal with them. On both sides.