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What is the desired close reason when a question is purposefully provided with incorrect information?

According to the January changes outlined in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow, I think it could be one of two reasons:

  • "a simple typographical error"
  • "it lacks sufficient information to diagnose the problem"

I think "it lacks sufficient information to diagnose the problem" is the most appropriate reason.

I don't think "a simple typographical error" is appropriate because its not a simple or unintentional typo.

Is another reason more appropriate? Or is there a more appropriate action?


In my case, the context is usually web server configuration because I troll the , , and friends. In the web server configuration context, the question is often similar to the following.

My site worked when it was HTTP, but it does not work when I added
HTTPS. Here's my configure file:
<Config>
    server = somesite.com
    ...
</Config>

My first step in trouble shooting is test the site or server with OpenSSL's s_client. s_client will tell me if SSL/TLS is available, what the server's certificate looks like, and what the certificate chain looks like.

After running s_client, I often discover the information was bogus. Rather than using example.com, which is reserved by ICANN for the purpose (and alerts me and others), the person will hijack someone else's domain to ask a question (which is often not configured for SSL/TLS in the first palce).

And it sometimes leads to a debate like at SSLError on requests module. For questions like that, I'd prefer to disengage and point back to a Meta discussion on the subject.

Before saying "just add a comment", please consider: this problem happens multiple times a day - its not a one-off issue that happens on occasion. And comments sometimes engage the person to argue their case (which I'm not interested in being a part of).

1 Answer 1

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This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, these are often resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.

For the specific question you cited, the "Questions seeking debugging help must include..." close reason works also.

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  • Why does "it lacks sufficient information to diagnose the problem" not the most appropriate? Its not a simple typo, and it does lack the required information (which implies it lacks sufficient information).
    – jww
    Jul 12, 2014 at 8:54

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