I would like to propose a badge for the heroic work of hunting down a good duplicate, and nominating to close another question as a duplicate of that.
I'm not entirely sure what the criteria for Deduplicator should be. I want to reward the mundane but important work of finding a good duplicate to link to, and making the nomination with a suitable link.
Probably, the badge should be awarded when a sufficient number of users have agreed with the duplicate vote. I see enough scatter in the close votes to want to propose less than a full consensus of five "close as duplicate" votes -- 4 should suffice, maybe even 3 if the others are not competing for another duplicate (i.e. voting to close for other reasons, perhaps constrained to just a few of the possible close reasons).
Also, not sure what the numbers should be. Maybe doing this 30 times to earn this badge in Bronze, 150 for Silver, 600 for Gold?
What I currently see is a group of high-rep users (I have my eyes on a particular one) who post simple, correct answers to simple, uninspiring questions from the hip, when (IMNSHO) the correct action would be to close as duplicate.
(There is a grey area here. Some simple FAQ-style questions are so specific that no duplicate completely and accurately addresses that specific combination of requirements. Those should probably be left alone, perhaps with a downvote as "unlikely to help future visitors".)
I can understand how answering these questions is the path of least resistance -- posting an accepted answer gains you rep, and search sucks; so it's easier and more rewarding to simply write a three-line answer, and probably have it accepted in short order. Offering a badge for what I perceive as the correct action would at least dress it up as a condoned alternative to answering.
(Ideally, I would like for the duplicate linker to actually gain more rep than you get for an accepted answer, but I realize this is probably pie in the sky.)
To clarify the proposed name, I think of this as locating duplicates and refactoring to reduce duplication. Hence, we perform data deduplication (at least, hopefully, in terms of future answers) by doing this. I'm certainly open to better naming proposals.