I asked a question about handling email in PHP, which unfortunately was very quickly sidetracked as a 'possible duplicate'. I am sure people are likely to read the title or first line and do the same to this one (a part of the problem I am trying to seek advice on).
Once enough people read the [duplicate] marker in the name, they seem to simply take a fast look and then assume that it is correct and also mark it as duplicate. So now I have this facing me;
The issue is that as a 'low-reputation' user I have no way of removing the [duplicate] mark, and as such people seem to assume its accuracy and continue on without bothering with the question.
I have since edited to clarify my question further, including additional research I have put in since the original question was asked. However, there's not so much as a hint of comments or answers that would usually occur on questions. Obviously I attribute this to the [duplicate] tag.
tl:dr
How are low-reputation users meant to deal with this? I certainly don't intend on re-posting it, that would be a literal duplicate and simply a waste. Other questions about this simply have replies saying to edit it, as is suggested in the yellow text box, or vote to re-open. I don't have any re-open or similar privileges.
I came across How should low-rep users approach issues that could be solved by permissions they don't have access to? as well, which is somewhat relevant to my query here today. However the 'privilege' needed here is of more direct consequence to me as a user. While I understand why reputation earns these privileges to ensure that new users can't just come in and start abusing them, the ability to resolve an issue that had a question marked as duplicate should be one afforded to almost every user, assuming they aren't BRAND NEW.
I strongly feel that the question and its 'duplicate' are not alike, and while other questions can also be marked as duplicate, the detail I am asking for is not found within them. (This is of course my own opinion and may not reflect how the community chooses to shed light on it.)
Furthermore, it seems to me that a lot of users are very quick to jump to such conclusions. I also had a user practically accuse me of wanting to leech code and have someone do the work for me. I ALWAYS, as do most legitimate users, ask for explanations so I can increase my understanding, not just copy and paste. These assumptions lead to closed/locked/duplicate questions. What is the best way, once more as a low-rep user, to be handling this in the future? Should I reword the question in a specific manner?