I recently ran across the following comment
This seems like a serious conflict of interest and possible abuse of duplicate closing privileges and one that is incredibly self serving. So, what is the official guidance in situations like this?
I recently ran across the following comment
This seems like a serious conflict of interest and possible abuse of duplicate closing privileges and one that is incredibly self serving. So, what is the official guidance in situations like this?
Something I've learned as a moderator:
If it's possible your action will be viewed as a conflict of interest, ask for help.
In the case of the super-close vote dupe hammer, that means flagging the post for moderator attention "Other", and explaining the situation.
Not doing so could be considered an abuse of close vote powers.
Close Voters:
If you see an instance where you genuinely believe the older questions have not been answered sufficiently, add your answer to those older questions. Close the newer question as a duplicate; but take extreme care to make sure there's not an appearance of a conflict of interest.
Closing as a duplicate entails looking at the questions in their totality:
None of those criteria involve taking into account your answers to a question.
If you are involved in a question and you think other questions may be a duplicate, the best thing you can do is to flag the question for moderator involvement using a custom flag and explaining the situation.
That's what we do when we're involved in a post, and that's what the community expects you to do in these situations.
Again, please use your powers judiciously and without appearance of a conflict of interest.
It's done by me, and has been reversed by a moderator.
Here's a detailed version of what happened: I answered this question earlier. And it turned out to be a duplicate of an old question. Later, when I got plenty of free time, I read the old question and all of its answers. I think my answer is better than any one of them. Then I searched on Meta to see what I could do on such situation, and ask a question if there's no one already. I found the question Should I flag a question as duplicate if it has received better answers? and read it carefully. I think it can apply to my problem. Then it's what you saw, I duplicated the old question to the new one, and left a comment explaining why I did that.
I must add that I'm not advertising my answer, I simply thought my answer is better. None of the answers of the old question explained it from the C standard point to this language-lawyer question.
The moderator has sent to me a message explaining why it could be considered an abuse of my close-vote power. I understand it and will be more careful in the future.
I hope people can read my answer and the old question before judging. I'm not expecting you to think my answer is better, just expecting you to believe that I'm not advertising my answer, or, as OP comments, reputation grab. As for the question, I trust the judgement of @Lightness Races in Orbit(as an expert in the language) that my answer isn't good enough to earn such action.
I understand the rule now, I'm still a little sad though :(
The base case here is that either the newer question needed closing as a dupe of the older one, or vice versa. It doesn't matter which one is older, which is what the accused party was pointing out with that policy link, though the older one is a good "default" to remain open where no other deciding factor tips the scale.
The author in question took existing guidance that this decision may come down to the quality of the answers, and acted accordingly. I've done this myself on occasion, and been supported in that action.
I certainly wouldn't call it "an egregious abuse" just because one of the answers under consideration happened to be written by the guy holding the dupe-hammer. In fact, Stack Exchange encourages us to assume good faith, which you're certainly not doing here.
However, in cases where it is not necessarily clear that your own answer is massively superior to those on an older question, it would be polite to get a few people to back you up in the comments, first.
In this particular situation, I would agree that the newer answer is probably not good enough to warrant this and, given the wealth of additional answers on the older question, I would disagree with the action taken. Again, though, I still see no outright evidence that the individual taking that action acted in bad faith. A moderator reversed the action and now everything's fine.