So here I was, happily reviewing some first posts to start my Monday morning, when a question titled Why doesn't “margin: auto” center an element vertically? comes across my queue. I think to myself, "well, this is a well formatted and posed question, but there must be an answer to it already".
So as a resourceful SO user, I go to the googles, and type in "why doesn't margin auto align vertically". The first result is another SO question, this one titled Using margin:auto to vertically align div (the second result was the question in question, but we won't make this about my lack of observational skills).
"Aha!", I exclaim. "This has an excellent answer, well sourced and very detailed, I'll flag the review question as a duplicate, and the user will be able to see the link to the other question and find him/herself an answer".
I happily copy/paste the link to the duplicate question into the dupe box, and BAM! I get the "STOP! Look and Listen." dialogue.
What I'm trying to say is that we shouldn't be using questions like this, regardless of how well written they are, for review. I feel like this is a question that anyone with a little html/css knowledge will know has been asked before, and they'll review it with a process similar to the one I just described.
The above paragraph is no longer relevant because I now know that review audit questions are picked by an algorithm. I guess the new request is that we somehow change the behavior when you correctly mark the question in the review audit as a duplicate.