116

It's apparent that reputable members (ranging between 10k - 600k reputation) are answering duplicates.

It's understandable if the question being answered isn't a blatant duplicate, but that's not the case for this discussion.

I've included posts to justify this discussion. Do NOT single these users out, as they are only a few of MANY who answer blatant duplicates. These references only exist to prove the point.

I'm surprised that a discussion about this hasn't already been started. Maybe it's not an issue? If not, why discourage answering duplicates? Something isn't adding up.


Here are a few posts to express my concern:

Answered by someone with 60k+ rep

Answered by someone with 600k+ rep

The next 2 answers are for the same question, focus the same concept, yet the user doesn't edit their existing answer, rather post a completely new answer as a follow-up.

  • Retry promise himself after fail in node js[1][2]

Answered by someone with 500k+ rep


If you'd like me to upload more examples, there's plenty - simply let me know.

The point is, reputable users are purposefully answering duplicate questions in hopes of gaining more reputation.

I can't imagine how many duplicates exist without actually being marked duplicate (unjustifiably by people with enough rep to know better).


What's a solution?

These actions result in information being segregated across many posts. Some of the duplicates aren't actually marked duplicate, making it harder to obtain existing information on the subject, resulting in duplicate answers.

These users are highly knowledgeable, yet they seem prioritize reputation over site quality.

Recently, I saw a 300k+ rep user answer a question that was a blatant duplicate. After googling for a duplicate, the first result was actually answered by the guy who answered the "regurgitated" question - the answers were near identical. I'd link it, but due to my reputation, I cannot view deleted answers, as the regurgitated answer was deleted shortly after I commented (will edit it into this post once I reach the rep requirement to view it).


I don't have many suggestions for solutions myself. This seems to be a pretty deep issue, which would require some major changes.

All I can think of is:

  • Lower the rep gained for duplicate questions (similar to how users lose rep when someone deletes their account)
  • Give knowledgeable users a medium to express their understanding on a subject (which seems to be supported via the Documentation beta, but apparently doesn't seem to be helping)
  • Give "this may be a duplicate" warning to those answering questions, in a similar way users are warned about posting duplicate questions
50
  • 47
    There is a bit more to it than just rep-hounding. What all of these users have in common is that they can no longer cast a normal dup vote. They are gold badgers, their vote is binding and the question is instantly closed. Being the only user to close a question is not a great privilege. You get to hear, loudly, about the OP's problems implementing the solution and it is all your fault. I don't do it anymore either, life is entirely too short to have to put up with that kind of crap. Faking the dup vote comment is a workaround. Sep 25, 2017 at 6:57
  • 97
    Call My a cynic but, I genuinely think SO (the company) doesn't care anymore. The days of wanting to build a resource that improves the internet are gone. What they want now, is people participating, clicking on ads and looking for jobs. People who ask stupid duplicate questions are just as valuable a user as those that close duplicates and generally clean up the site. This kind of problem has been an issue for years and years, I've seen loads of people suggest solutions. Not one has ever been implemented that I'm aware of. The status quo continues.
    – Liam
    Sep 25, 2017 at 7:53
  • 11
    Closing as duplicates is one of the most difficult features on this site if you ask me. In most cases, it's about abstracting a question and closing it as a dup to a generic question versus tailoring an answer specific to that question. I honestly don't know what the best thing to do either in these cases, and that's probably why I'm filtering out duplicates from the close vote review queue. It also doesn't help that gold tag badge holders can't vote for duplicates that might be borderline, since their vote will actually close those questions immediately. Sep 25, 2017 at 7:59
  • 11
    I don't really see why you can choose what type of duplicate vote you use, and gold badges could have the option to dupe hammer or just add standard close vote. I'd suggest this change is less work than creating a whole new documentation section and then binning the whole lot off after a couple of months
    – Liam
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:03
  • 5
    @HansPassant [insert Spiderman quote here] That said, has your experience been raised anywhere on Meta for discussion? That sounds like something that should probably at least be brought to everyone's attention.
    – jpmc26
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:13
  • 4
    I must say I've noticed recently an increase in multiple answers to dups, including from people who should know better. Haven't a clue how to fix it, and penalising it would be more hassle than it's worth, I think.
    – Ken Y-N
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:14
  • 13
    @Liam Don't forget to add "push political agendas" to the list.
    – jpmc26
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:14
  • 29
    The solution is to make duplicates more accessible, and provide better incentives for posting new answers to years-old questions with extremely outdated but highly upvoted and accepted answers. No one wants to point to an outdated answer just because the question was first asked in the late 00s. And the ones who do refer to old duplicates don't read past the pinned, accepted, outdated answer, and thereafter automatically assume their question hasn't been answered to their satisfaction. So linking to duplicates doesn't even work as it should.
    – BoltClock
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:25
  • 7
    Reputable people got that many points by answering many questions instead of closing them.
    – GolezTrol
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:33
  • 8
    @BoltClock How would that solve anything? The problem is rep-wh.. who just want to get their 25 points, they don't care about anything else. When they see a chance to get them they go for it even if they know it's a dup. Helping other people find dupes and making the originals better is good but won't help with the problem raised by OP.
    – Oleg
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:50
  • 29
    @Oleg: It would certainly help me, I have so much rep to my name I couldn't care less about earning any more, but I can't count the number of times I've answered duplicate questions just because I can't find a suitable duplicate because search has been terrible for years in a row.
    – BoltClock
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:52
  • 7
    @DBed - Well, that's good advice, and used. Perhaps it could be extended to "just ignore it when a user doesn't want to dup-vote a lazy question". Tolerance works best when applied both ways. Anybody that expects frequent contributors to be the sole guardians of the site are apt to be disappointed now and then. Keeping it entertaining and useful is everybody's job and one that does start with whomever is first to create new content. That they tend to suck at it, and are never held responsible, is the way this tends to go down-hill. Sep 25, 2017 at 8:55
  • 11
    Maybe the Mjolnir managers should be given more options, and more power. If they just want to add a vote for closing in the 'normal' way, it should be an option. If the question is NPE or i++ + ++i, they should have the power to just close the question with one click without putting in the effort of finding the duplicate - the OP can then put in the effort to go looking for it, (what they should have done in the first place), when they see their question closed as 'Mega-dupe'. If a Thor misuses that power, it could be withdrawn. Sep 25, 2017 at 12:07
  • 16
    @Script47 yes. Once the duplicate answer is posted, the battle, (whatever exactly it is), is over. The rep-cucumber does not care about the occasional downvote since, on average, they make more on upvotes and accepts. The OP does not care s/he has copypasted out their unique homework answer as soon as it appeared, and will never use that 'member for today' account again, so any down/close/delete voting is irrelevant. The only measures lkely to be effective are those that discourage the posting of the duplicate answers in the first place. Sep 25, 2017 at 13:40
  • 4
    A possible solution is to have a grace period (5 minutes?) where if a duplicate is found within that period of time all voting is reversed so the duplicate answeres gain nothing, other than a bad press.
    – Script47
    Sep 25, 2017 at 14:31

9 Answers 9

49

I made a suggestion that kind of covers off your third point:

Give "this may be a duplicate" warning to those answering questions, in a similar way users are warned about posting duplicate questions

The feature request:

Could: "Possible duplicate of.." be given prominence for answering users?

Scenario:

  • User 1 asks question
  • User 2 votes to close as duplicate
  • User 3 clicks to answer and is presented with dupe preview
  • User 3 has to choose to close or continue to answer

Dupe preview would look something like this:

enter image description here

5
  • 2
    But this won't work if no one has proposed the duplicate yet. Sep 25, 2017 at 8:32
  • 6
    @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ that's why I said: "I made a suggestion that kind of covers off your third point:"
    – Tanner
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:33
  • 3
    @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ given that this question is about answering "blantant duplicates" (bold font is as used by asker) I think cases when no one proposed the dupe don't qualify in this context (on a more general note I personally see no reason to worry much about not very obvious duplicates and about answers to these)
    – gnat
    Sep 25, 2017 at 14:05
  • 7
    In fact, this is probably the most practical solution IMO. If there's no dup proposed yet, then all potential answerers can't be asked to search for duplicates. But if someone has already proposed a dup, then an answerer can't ignore it and simply say "I didn't know it's a dup". This makes them responsible for answering a potential dup.
    – P.P
    Nov 17, 2017 at 20:36
  • 3
    I thought of that too. Some users ignore the comments when they're trying to answer the fastest possible. So a warning like this would make me think, for sure. Jan 3, 2018 at 19:22
34

I have a suggestion, which I am always attempting to voice since it never gets done.

Include the chosen tags in the search criteria for “Questions that may already have your answer.”

Seriously, this will improve a lot of duplicate question asking.

Many OP's have no clue they are asking duplicate questions, or that one existed. Most of them were just trying to look for terminology, or thought they had a unique situation since the question asking interface showed no issue. They are for the most part not familiar with the site. Even users who are willing to read the instructions, and click extra boxes, still fall into these pitfalls.

Without at least making a good first effort to show them the duplicate post in the ask question interface, it is nearly impossible to expect them to not post their question.

Also, I know there is some work being done on this interface, or at least that is what I usually hear in response to gripes about the ask question interface, but it is been 6-8 years since it was changed. It is far overdue.

4
  • 1
    This is a very good idea, but is only tangentially related to the OP, which is not "why are there so many duplicate questions? but rather "why do high rep users answer clearly duplicate questions, instead of closing as duplicate?".
    – Zev Spitz
    Sep 25, 2017 at 8:39
  • 9
    Well, obviously no one's ever seen that suggestion, because you hid it over there on "that other Meta" :-) Sep 25, 2017 at 8:41
  • Your suggestion is great, but I still think that lots of users would ignore it. True, it depends of how you are formulating the question. I had a case where I couldn't find a solution to my problem. Searched google/stackoverflow but got half and (in my view) bad answers. So I wrote a new question. Then I thought of a correct title. Guess what, one of the suggestions led to a solution that is exactly what I was looking for (different approach + very elegant solution). I certainly would see it added yes.
    – KarelG
    Sep 27, 2017 at 10:18
  • 1
    I disagree that users would ignore it, and your explanation that a suggested question solved your problem definitely highlights the need for this here.
    – Travis J
    Sep 27, 2017 at 18:37
26

In my view, the reason why it happens is efficiency, pure and simple. Desire for points isn't the issue. It's simply a desire to get the question 'dealt with' (answered soundly) quickly, to save people wasting time on writing the answer. It is often far quicker and easier to write a new answer from scratch than to spend the time wading through a few hundred thousand questions seeking the right duplicate.

If the Stack Overflow team are worried about it, they will put effort into making it easy to find duplicates. They'll provide some interface that allows a user to build up a list of duplicate candidates and make selections from that list. There might be entries created by the 'general population' but there should also (or instead) be the opportunity for personal lists of duplicates.

Maybe if a suitably privileged user (gold badge, 20k, …?) starts using the duplicate search interface for a question, a temporary lock is placed on the question (with explanation reported to other users, including those already typing an answer) preventing the addition of answers. There should be a timeout (10 minutes?) after which the lock is relinquished.

There needn't be any specific award for identifying the duplicate using the interface. Less privileged users might get an award (a couple of points perhaps) if they identify the question as a duplicate in a comment and the question is closed as a duplicate of the question they suggest. Only the first to enter the comment with URL, or to vote to close as duplicate, would get the bonus. I've quite often been grateful to another person for identifying a good duplicate so that I can wield Mjölnir effectively.

I've previously mentioned something similar to this in an answer to Would SO benefit from an AI mechanism that helped moderators identify duplicated or related questions?

7
  • 2
    Yea Varily and Amen.
    – Stephen Rauch Mod
    Sep 25, 2017 at 14:24
  • 10
    "It is often far quicker and easier to write a new answer from scratch than to spend the time wading through a few hundred thousand questions seeking the right duplicate." You may need to upgrade your google-fu. The obvious dupes are usually the first search result when searching for the post title.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 26, 2017 at 6:49
  • 7
    @Cerbrus: glad to know that works for you. It doesn't always work for me. Sep 26, 2017 at 6:50
  • 3
    I'm guessing searchability also depends on the question's language. For JS, at least, finding dupes isn't really a problem, as long as one doesn't use SO's search.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 26, 2017 at 6:53
  • 1
    @JonathanLeffler you can also close with an approx. duplicate, find a better one, and edit the list, remove the old one, and put the new one: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/355666/… Jan 3, 2018 at 19:30
  • The only reasons I ever post a dupe and I have is #1 because after searching for 10-20 minutes I couldn't find a dupe meaning S.O. search for utterly failed (and maybe google's). So I post only later to be told it's a dupe by someone that has intimate knowledge of the available answers. The less common reason is because the answers I do find don't actually address my actual question but overzealous closers close the question without actually understanding it.
    – gman
    May 9, 2019 at 19:56
  • 2
    Even as an answerer, when someone asks a question I know is a dupe I often find it impossible to find the dupe and so after 10-20 minutes I trying I give up and re-answer the question.
    – gman
    May 9, 2019 at 19:57
21

I received this comment earlier from someone - not answering a blatant dupe, but answering a blatantly off-topic question:

@Makoto Because I wanted to share my insight and I don't agree with every SO rule out there.

This resonates with a point I've been making about this situation for a while, and it holds true to all types of questions, even duplicates:

Not everyone agrees.

Even worse...

Sometimes the mob gets it wrong.

Let's dissect the first point and see if we can find a solution.


The issue that I've noticed when answering and closing suspected duplicates is agreement. Even I disagree with some dupes sometimes. Nowadays I look closely at the question and try to see if it really is a dupe, or if the answerer will really get the guidance they're looking for from that other question. I've noticed others closing dupes simply key off of a few critical words (null pointer, scanner, etc) and not be as critical of the dupe closure.

The way I've interpreted duplicate closure was rudimentary:

  • Closing the question as a dupe meant that the answer was elsewhere.
  • Closing the question as a dupe meant that the answers present in the other question can solve their problem, even if the questions were asked under slightly different pretenses.
  • Closing the question as a dupe didn't necessarily imply any quality checks on the question being closed itself.
  • Closing the question never implied any judgment on the OP themselves.

...however, I think that there's a lot being lost in translation here.

For starters, people get offended if their question is closed as a duplicate, as if it's a knock to them for not doing all of the research they could've. In reality, it could be that they didn't know how to massage Google, or they didn't know what key phrases to use in order to get the answer they were looking for. I get and realize that simply "search for it" is a common rallying cry when it comes to looking for dupes, but...

  • Stack Overflow's search is woefully underequipped to handle this. You fare better on Google.
  • Not everyone that's trying to figure out why their code written with Threads isn't responsive after a few times knows what "deadlock" (or "livelock") means, or the user who writes a loop that never completes may not know what "infinite loop" is.

We want users to find this information for themselves so we don't have to, or to make it easier and worth our while to do it for them.

Even then, it's not going to be simple. There are enough questions on the site that curating and finding the best authoritative answers to a specific problem is likely possible but time-consuming, unrewarding, and can be wholly undermined by a handful of suddenly popular questions. Worse, you're not going to get everyone to get along with the duplicate closure, and you're not going to get everyone to think that questions should be closed at all (as in the case above).


On to the second point: we're all human and we make human mistakes when evaluating questions. Here are some queries to audit the use of the dupehammer, and we can derive how often it is we actually take the time to reopen a question that's been previously closed as a dupe.

No, we're not all going to like our mistakes and we wish there was a simple algorithm we could follow to close all questions as dupes of a certain type. But no such algorithm exists; the best we can do is a heuristic which still has a chance of failing us.


So...what can we do? It's largely cultural with a little bit of tech mixed in.

  • Answering duplicates shouldn't be regarded as a massive sin. It happens; we find it simpler to answer than to search for a duplicate, or some of us are just plain apathetic to the ways of the system. Instead of fighting them (hint: you're not going to win because they outnumber you 100:1), realize that mistakes happen and people are people with their own opinions.

  • Fix search. Seriously. We should be able to identify a duplicate with a few key words from search, and the system should be able to inform (and actively prevent) askers from asking a question if the system can actually reliably find a duplicate for them. This is the pipe dream; once we get to this point we'll finally realize our goal of less duplicate questions. However, at a minimum we should have search be at least on par of that with Google's search.

I mean c'mon, it's bad when you see an obvious NPE question and the dupe suggestions mention nothing about NPEs...

11
  • 2
    Note that I didn't mention anything about users looking to close everything as a dupe. Some of 'em wander around Meta doing that. Irony hit me when this question was closed as a dupe. They're a factor but we outnumber them.
    – Makoto
    Sep 27, 2017 at 22:54
  • 3
    RE "Answering duplicates shouldn't be regarded as a massive sin": Apathy isn't a mistake. Apathy isn't excuse for yet another answer to yet another duplicate. You're saying we should just shrug off users who can't be bothered to close obvious dupes as such. Those users are the problem. Users need to be more selective in what they answer. More often than not, dumping the question title in google will get you a adequate dupe target.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 9:46
  • @Cerbrus: It's not apathy. It's an acknowledgment and reminder that this isn't going to be some overnight policy change that everyone magically jumps behind and supports. You will have people that disagree with this and will skirt your policies because, like I said earlier, they outnumber you 100:1. It's easier to educate them and win them over than treating them like they're entirely evil and entirely wrong at what they do.
    – Makoto
    Sep 28, 2017 at 14:41
  • So, did I misunderstand "or some of us are just plain apathetic to the ways of the system."?
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 14:49
  • @Cerbrus: I wanted to clarify my stance on it. I'm not being apathetic here. I largely agree with the sentiment that is being expressed. It's simply that there are others which won't bend or budge, and will only bend or budge under the right kind of motivation. Treating those users like they're horrible people isn't the right mentality to get into. Sorry if I confused you there.
    – Makoto
    Sep 28, 2017 at 14:50
  • Okay, to clarify my stance: I don't have a problem with treating people that are "apathetic to the ways of the system", like they're horrible. This site has rules. If one doesn't follow those rules, one is a horrible person. (Note: grain of salt)
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 15:01
  • @Cerbrus: Remember how I said that the mob can get it wrong sometimes? This question was closed as a duplicate not all that long ago. Does that make everyone who answered it before a horrible person? ...
    – Makoto
    Sep 28, 2017 at 15:02
  • One closure does not imply a community consensus that the question should be closed. But yes, obviously, they're horrible people.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 15:03
  • 1
    @Cerbrus: It took a while longer than I thought, but thank you for concisely demonstrating my point...
    – Makoto
    Sep 28, 2017 at 15:03
  • I don't think your point was in conflict with mine, though... *shrug*
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 15:05
  • 1
    This is a good answer, @Makoto. Sadly not upvoted nearly as far as it ought to be. Mar 21, 2019 at 23:02
8

Allow answering any question with a link to another answer in some different question. Grant more rep for this kind of answer than a regular answer if voted up (e.g. 15 points instead of 10). Render this kind of responses nearly identical to copy-pasting the original response to this question. It's important that the link points to an answer, not to the duplicate question!

This would give karmawhores an incentive to point to correct answer of duplicate question instead of writing/copy-pasting a new answer in place. In addition, it would give more automated metadata about duplicate answers and maybe avoid the need for closing the question (I see no harm about duplicate questions that have a single link-only answer and automatic info about related question. Future search queries have a better change to find either this duplicate question or the original version. In addition, such link-only answer would be automatically updated in case the original answer gets improved.)

I'm not sure if the author of such duplicate question should deserve a punishment in case the link-only answer gets upvoted. That author should definitely not be punished for up voting that answer himself to avoid any deterrant to vote correctly linked answer.

Maybe give an extra bonus (perhaps even 20 points per upvote) if such link-only answers have been provided by low rep users (e.g. <500). This might give new users an incentive to try to look for existing solutions while collecting rep. Hopefully this would allow them to get better at looking for duplicates before asking new questions.

(Looking for duplicates is sometimes hard. I personally was not able to find this question and tried to ask very similar question here in meta.)

3
  • This kind of style would also allow linking to multiple different related questions. I believe that the current style of marking as a duplicate of a single another question is too limiting. Sometimes the question is not an exact duplicate but multiple answers from different questions are still valid as-is. Allowing link-only answers for these cases would allow entering all those as answers for a single semi-new question. Mar 21, 2018 at 9:20
  • 3
    Duplicate questions can link to up to five questions.
    – CodeCaster
    Mar 21, 2018 at 9:41
  • 2
    @CodeCaster Only a select few can edit the list of duplicates (moderators and gold badge holders, IIRC). Mar 21, 2018 at 19:24
-2

Luckily I've escaped a specific mention in your citations!

My personal threshold for "exact duplicate" is quite high - for me the question has to be pretty much identical to another question. I've only recently started to close the i++ + ++i type questions as duplicates; but perhaps that's more to do with my becoming jaded by the sheer number of those types of questions being asked on the C and C++ tags.

I also believe there is an element of "showing off" in being able to deliver an answer quickly. It's also easier to answer than spend the time searching for duplicates. Coupled with the fact that you can earn points with an answer, answering becomes too tempting.

Personally I think reputation ought to be awarded to someone who initially spots a duplicate that is concurred by other members of the community and eventually closed as such. But deciding upon the amount of reputation awarded, and other issues such as what should be the award to a gold hammer close (where concurrence is not required) do not make this straightforward. Would reputation also be recalculated retrospectively?

7
  • 29
    RE: "showing off": This is why I'm so motivated to "beat them", by finding a proper dupe target faster than someone can say "= is an assignment, you need to use =="
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 25, 2017 at 11:17
  • 5
    @Cerbrus I can understand ' I've only recently started to close the i++ + ++i type questions as duplicates'. It's much easier to type 'UB' as a comment and downvote than go searching for the canonical dupe, and who wants to apply more than the absolute minimum of effort on such questions, given thier 'coypasta from homework and don't bother checking first' nature. Spending more time on handling a bad question than the OP did in posting it is just disheartening:( Sep 25, 2017 at 11:58
  • 6
    @MartinJames: What if I told you you can save time spent for multiple users, by closing the question? ;-)
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 25, 2017 at 12:02
  • 1
    @Cerbrus Oh, I get that, which is why I often close-vote such questions with the catch-all 'too broad'. It's not the best fit, but it's the quickest. Sep 25, 2017 at 12:40
  • 2
    @MartinJames: But if a question is a duplicate, close-voting it as too broad is a little counter-productive.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 25, 2017 at 12:53
  • 5
    @Cerbrus: My current records are closing a question in 13 seconds and answering in 24.
    – BoltClock
    Sep 25, 2017 at 14:32
  • 3
    I agree with "It's also easier to answer" and "reputation ought to be awarded to someone who initially spots a duplicate". Sep 25, 2017 at 14:48
-6

I'd suggest taking @Tanner's suggestion one step ahead:

Hand out a -2 rep penalty (this number is debatable) to the answerer if they answer even after seeing the warning and if the question ultimately gets closed for being a dupe for which the warning was given. The penalty will be fair since they would have been presented with the dupe before they wrote their answer, thus making them accountable for answering a dupe.

-8

Being the person who wasn't singled out by putting up the first three links to questions which I answered to - let's give a different perspective:

  • First of all, mea culpa: I shouldn't have answered those. But back then I was really hunting "legendary" - and well, sometimes gamification wins over "qualifi-cation". I will try to do better from now on.
  • Nonetheless: you probably noticed that in each of those cases, my answer achieved more than 5 upvotes. So it seems: the people actually looking into the java tag, and looking at the combined input ... found the answer worth upvoting.

So, seriously: when you want to stop reputation hunters from answering "DUPS" - then the only way that will work is to reduce the potential benefit from answering such questions.

And beyond that: the really only thing that would prevent DUP questions and DUP answers would be if the technical infrastructure would prevent users from asking for duplicated content. And as outlined by others: this fact is known for years, and it seems that the people owning the infrastructure don't care. Any new question means clicks, and clicks turn into money. Duplicated questions do not. So, in that sense, all of this is somehow fighting windmills.

Finally: what is the outcome of this? A few questions out of zillions of DUPs with answers got deleted. And, me personally, I was frustrated for a day or two - which also means that anything between 20 and 50 close/delete votes for postings on the java tag came in those two days. Because that is what I do between answering - looking at stuff and voting all the time. But of course, we shouldn't talk about the net outcome of such discussions. Because it doesn't matter what happens in the real world ...

13
  • 18
    "found the answer worth upvoting." -> Because they recognize an correct answer to a familiar duplicate. The only reason it's getting upvoted is because so many people know the answer is correct, there's bound to be a few that don't care about the fact it's an answer to a obvious duplicate. The only way to remove the benefit is by cancelling rep gained from answers on dupes.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 9:42
  • I doubt that it is that simple. 5 or more upvotes is not something you receive that easily - at least on the java tag.
    – GhostCat
    Sep 28, 2017 at 9:55
  • 8
    Here's a recent example. 7 upvotes within a couple of minutes of it being posted.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:03
  • 1
    @Cerbrus And for an JavaScript outsider, this simply looks like a well written answer nicely explaining stuff and giving even "ready to run" snippets. This still resembles quality input.
    – GhostCat
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:33
  • 3
    So, we should just forget the fact that's it's a duplicate that's asked on a daily basis? Just because it's a well written answer?
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:35
  • See the updates I made to my answer. We can discuss this topic all day long, it will not at all influence the number of duplicate questions that get put up here. We are talking about the best way to fight a symptom. Because in the end, we all know that the root cause can't be fixed by us.
    – GhostCat
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:41
  • I've made a somewhat related feature request to remove the grace period for answering, after a question is closed as duplicate.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:42
  • 1
    And I disagree with that. I have seen more than once that an answer that I typed in on my mobile phone (giving me the grace period) was a much better fit than the duplicated answer. My efforts would have been lost for nothing without the grace period. There are some users that put up close votes very quickly - and sometimes they just get it wrong. Combine that with a gold badge for the associated tag ... not so good either. Besides: searching for duplicates using the mobile is even more terrible than doing that in front of a desktop. But: I do see the potential benefit from your idea.
    – GhostCat
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:45
  • Yea, mobile devices... I'm of the opinion that those can only really be used to view SO :P
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:47
  • I thought so, too. I was surprised myself to see how useful they can be occasionally. They even work for some of the review queues.
    – GhostCat
    Sep 28, 2017 at 10:51
  • 1
    Fun fact: I wrote this, and 90% of my content, from mobile. "Searching for duplicates is terrible" - This plays a huge role, besides the reputation. Writing a title gives duplicate suggestions for any language. In most cases, the suggestions are irrelevant, forcing users to Google for dupes. I'm not sure why users aren't forced to specify tags before the title, as tags are a requirement anyways. This small change would do wonders for the system which suggests duplicates when creating a title.
    – Vince
    Aug 16, 2018 at 18:19
  • "So, seriously: when you want to stop reputation hunters from answering "DUPS" - then the only way that will work is to reduce the potential benefit from answering such questions." there is another: incentivize (correct) duplicate closure: meta.stackexchange.com/a/387398/997587
    – starball
    Oct 6, 2023 at 2:53
  • 1
    @starball Always lofty ideas, but incentivizing will only work if there is a counterbalance; doing it wrong will need to have a downside, the opposite effect. Something that forces people to pause and think. Otherwise all questions are going to look like nails that need a dupe hammer. That counterbalance is never going to be implemented.
    – Gimby
    Oct 6, 2023 at 11:37
-15

They answer duplicates because they want those easy points, the solution is trivial and simple, I will expand on OP's first point and give you a chance to vote on it.

Lower the rep gained for duplicate questions (similar to how users lose rep when someone deletes their account)

  • 0 points for accepted answer to a dup
  • 5 points for upvote
  • 3 points for downvote

The numbers are not set in stone and can be tweaked but the goal should be to remove the incentive to answer dups.

2
  • 2
    This is basically(similar to) what has already been said here
    – Liam
    Sep 25, 2017 at 9:22
  • 1
    @Liam True, also meta.stackexchange.com/a/37478 from 2010. This question is also basically a dup(I think it's ok for meta maybe things changed after 3 or 7 years) nothing was done then and nothing will be done now. I can take some arguments from there and improve my answer but I don't think it will help.
    – Oleg
    Sep 25, 2017 at 9:34

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .