I'd like to start by referencing this post where the OP failed an audit by flagging a QUESTION as duplicate. The accepted answer there is "I think the action you took was perfectly fair so you have to just accept the failed audit and move on. It happens to everyone that does reviews." I have had a very similar experience when flagging a duplicate ANSWER. In the short term, the same answer applies to my case, but I would like to propose a possible solution. But first, some background...
I was just reviewing "First Posts" and was presented with this review task. It's a good answer, right? I thought so, but I don't want to be a "robo-reviewer", so I took a closer look. I noticed that the question was asked just over 2 weeks ago, so I wanted to know if this answer added something new.
I headed over to the original question and immediately spotted it--another answer that is EXACTLY the same as this one; word for word and even the formatting is the same! The only difference is that this other answer came 11 minutes after the question was asked and it was from a fairly high-rep user, whereas the one in my queue was posted just a few minutes ago from a brand new user. It looked like plagiarism to me, so I flagged it for moderator attention.
That was the wrong thing to do, apparently. SO slapped my hand and told me it was a high quality post and I should have left it as is.
Now, this is a good live-and-learn experience and after going through it and reading through many of the meta posts on the topic, I think I'll be more able to spot these tests for what they are: tests.
But there's something that bothers me about it. What if it WASN'T a test? What if this WAS a new user who actually DID make an exact copy? Wouldn't my not-flagging it be irresponsible? Isn't this auditing just training me to allow such shenanigans?
Ideally, reviewers should be checking for this sort of thing. I would like to propose two possible solutions:
- When you flag an answer, you get to choose between "spam", "rude or abusive", "not an answer" and "in need of moderator intervention". SO could add the option "Plagiarism" which would require you to post a link to the source material you suspect has been copied. In the review-audit, if you use that flag and point it to the original answer, then you should pass the audit. (Side note: this proposal would also address this question.)
- Don't show the user or post time in the review. I actually don't really like this solution very much, but it would probably be much easier to implement and is better than nothing. Essentially, I was "tricked" into thinking that this was a NEW, and DUPLICATE post, when in reality it was not. Don't show me that it was a new user that posted it 5 min ago when that's not the case. No information is better than misinformation. This could apply to just the "first post" queue (since first posts imply the user has no rep) but frankly, I don't think we should be considering a user's rep when deciding the quality of their questions/answers, anyway. We are supposed to be looking at the quality of the current POST, not user.