Coming from Rewarding overzealous users for answering duplicate questions is undermining the site which (funny) was just closed as duplicate, I'll drop my 3cents here. Forgive me chaotic form of this text, it's random ideas I find worth sharing.
A discussion has risen about removing points eared from duplicates and about earning points for finding duplicates.
1. Scoring by navigations
My initial thought was to grant some rep to users that successfully marked something as a duplicate. But then, what does this "sucessfully" really mean? The fact of accepting something as a duplicate does not mean it's worth anything. The duplicate must be used as a trampoline to the actual answer or knowledgebase. In my imagination, if users were to earn rep for duplicates, the site would have to track navigations through duplicate links. It can be just as simple as:
- user searched for something and found a topic called "foo bar baz [duplicate]"
- he opened it op, read it, and decided it matches his problem
- he noticed links to the actual response, so he clicked on them to read the probably better part of answers
- the site noticed he clicked on a "duplicate/seealso" link and navigated him there
- user views the linked page
now if the user upvotes anything, then not only the upvoted answer's or question's author gets the reputation, but also the voters for the DIRECTLY LAST link would get some small points
note1: I bet you've seen a post marked as duplicate pointing to a duplicate of a duplicate pointing to finally some answer. SO cannot grant score for all dupe-links visited in such sequence, as it would encourage deliberate "chaining" to earn more points by a single visit. One visitor jumping through many duplicates could then yield X times the same score to the same voters, just because voters decided to make a useless chain. Only the last link should score, as we want to have a "star-like" topology of duplicate links: all should point to the core, not jump around themselves; ensuring that only last link scores will also make sure the voters will try to pick the best duplicate target without additional intermediate duplicate jumps
- note2: later navigations through the same link "L" by the same user "U" will NOT be additionally scored, because the user "U" already upvoted something in the target post "P", so he can't upvote the thing again. His future navigations through "L" will not score; furthermore, his future navigations to this post "P" through other L1,L2,L3,.. will also not score, since the condition nav-and-upvote is already impossible to achieve because the vote has been already recorder. That's good because the first link he visited was probably the most important, because it was the primary thing that led him to post "P".
This would encourage finding and linking dupes to the most-asked/visited answers, and would therefore strenghen the core point of duplicates. At the same time, it would grant the duplicate-voters some bonus for their work, since once some question is closed as a duplicate, at least it's author will visit that link. Please mind that score would be earned only if the navigating user upvoted anything at the target site. Upvoting does not necessarily mean that he agrees with the decision about the duplicate, but still it means that the link navigated him to something worth reading.
2. Side-by-side duplicate search
After considering that, I got an impression that's important to provide better/quicker tools for marking questions as duplicates.
Current vote&search&picklink is quite fast an easy to use. But still, it could be improved.
One way to provide a something more handy is to pull the process out right onto the first screen. For example, if the "search for duplicate" box were side-by-side to the texteditor for editing answers then:
- it would remind answerers about looking for dupes
- it'd need less clicks (when I'm lazy, I'd use it more)
- it would compete for the writer's attention
The last point is important. Writing short&quick answer to a common question takes some seconds, a minute or three. One or two lines of text plus some code. Writers of such answers are probably perfectly aware that the answer would be quick. With side-by-side searchbox, maybe they'd consider using it instead of writing another answer - because it'd now cost them the same effort.
Another option would be to make it not side-by-side, but maybe place it directly on top of the texteditor area for answers. It would then naturally injected into the "flow" of reading the question and answering it. Now it'd be read, search for dupe, then write answer. Of course it can't be a required step, it'd be just suggested and right-in-the-view. After entering some text in that searchbox, results could be displayed in a quick popup window similar to autocomplete, dismissed by ESC or clicking aside. Oh -- similar to the popup that suggests an already-existing-question when entering the question's title on "ask new question" form.
3. Or better, auto-search integrated with answering
Another thing just occurred to me. Having an extra searchbox is some idea, but it may turn out to be not as ergonomic as it could be. How about having side-by-side just the results of the search, with no actual searchbox. Instead, the duplicate-finder would take text of the answer being written as the search input. That would be something! Add to that earning some rep for successful detection of duplicate, and it might turn out to be first-class answerer's tool, competetive to writing an answer!
Performance might be an issue here, as every single attemp to write an answer would trigger a search, so it might look like an insane idea at first. However, the mechanism could have several thresholds and optimizations, for example:
- obvious: typical delay between textchange and invoking search
- try to match words from the answer to tags and use them in duplicate lookup
- inobvious: don't search until there are at least X words of length at least Y
- don't search if there are more than X paragraphs/lines (*)
- ignore code included in the answer except for alphanumeric identifiers longer than X
(*) - an edge case here is very interesting and worth considering: don't search if there's more than 1 line in the answer. This would make the answer's text area behave as a quick duplicate-search-box, with results visible to the left/right of the editor, and the search could be dismissed simply by pressing and ENTER and breaking the line.
Example of use:
- I've just read the question, whoo, same thing again.. still I'm to lazy to click 'close' or I'm overzealous or I want the REP
- clicked on textarea to begin writing
- wrote about three words and search results started showing up, caught my eye, attention to textarea lost for a fraction of second, but I'm still in the "flow of writing"
- "ach crap, ok I'll make a quick search" [~ I'll still get some rep for a dupe?]
I continue to write, all the time in the same line, eyes looking at search results, but instead of elaborating the response, now I'm tossing keywords that fuel the search to see what shows up
branch/A: something showed up, damned duplicates, I click on it and vote as duplicate
- branch/B: no reasonable results, I got bored or irritated, so I simply ignore the results and write the rest of the answer, probably deleting the keywords I just entered, or incorporating them into the answer