There have been many questions about solutions to FGITW, or people who answer anything because rep. Over the years.. obviously there's been no to minimum mitigation of this and we all know it's bad.
- Because it encourages new users that they don't have to do any research
- It makes it harder to curate the site when people refuse to follow the rules
Now, some people genuinely might not know a question is an immediate duplicate based on the suggested links and that's ok. When we get into higher rep users who are intimately familiar with the site rules, it has a harder effect.
A moderator suggested I bring this up, because I am asking the moderators and the community:
Would we be ok with mod flags against these offending users? These flags are obviously subjective to the handler, but if we could come up with, as a community, a guiding standard we could encourage moderators to take up a stand to help the curators of the site fight a losing battle.
Examples:
an obviously established user answers a question that is closed as a duplicate. This duplicate is obscure, hard to find, incorrect, etc. The answerer is flagged, and receives no punishment. (This is good)
an obviously established user answers a question that is closed as a duplicate. This duplicate is well known, very visible on SO, or very visible on google SEO results. This user is flagged and receives a moderator handled punishment (maybe a 1 day answer ban.. not sure here, please feel free to suggest).
a lower rep user does the exact same as example 2. Leniency may be applied here because of their status in the community. This would obviously require a bit of research into the user, because there are definitely low-rep users who are extremely well versed in using SO.
These examples all pertain to moderator subjectivity. But it is also up to us, the community, the ones who would be casting the flags, to do our due diligence. Adverse punishments to flaggers could be placed if flags are deemed to be malicious in nature, targeted (tricky one), etc.
This is not an issue we need tools for, we simply need a consensus agreement, and the dedication to handle it ourselves.
This question focuses on community solutions because of how long it takes SE to develop (this is not a negative note, it's just how it is because of their staffing and quota backlog), on top of them perhaps even shutting down the idea. This is a power we can take into our own hands