Today I came across a question that was marked as a duplicate of a question posted in 2012. The two questions were very similar, and the original question and answer was quite well upvoted, but it had several properties that made me think that if it had been posed in 2015 it probably wouldn't have been so well received:
- It was tagged with both c and c++. It's arguable that it applied to both but still, this is one thing that gets newbies harshly downvoted
- It was a self-answer to promote the OP's library via an off-site link to GitHub
- The self-accepted answer contained no explanation of the code other than an explanation of how to call it
The question and answer may have been perfectly fine at the time they were both posted, and it looks to me like a good library. However, requests for library recommendations are supposed to be off-topic in questions, and I think it's reasonable to say that this applies to self-answers too, because the question is contrived to be answered with such a recommendation.
Separately from these reasons I don't think it was really a dupe, because the newer question asked for solutions pertaining to a specific special case that offers several optimization opportunities, whereas the original was a generic solution, however my main question is this:
When voting to close a question as a duplicate, should close voters be obliged to check over the original question to make sure that it conforms with SO's rules as of 2015?
I don't really agree with retro-actively purging old questions based on new standards (at least, not aggressively) but at the least I think that certain questions should no longer become valid for marking other questions as duplicates of them, if they are no longer good questions according to contemporary standards.