There is an extremely popular question in bash: Bash scripting & read file line by line. It has attracted almost 500K visits in four years and there is already a canonical, well documented, useful answer - the accepted one.
However, I noticed that there are answers posted that explain the same, but often with less detail and without the important caveats that the accepted answer has. Moreover, they were posted years after. Since the question has these many amount of visits, they eventually got some upvotes, so they give the wrong message: you can post a bad answer after a while, or just repeat something that was already posted, and get some credit out of it.
We could state that such situations should be handled using our super power: voting. In this case, downvoting. However, I don't think it is fair to downvote an answer if it is a duplicate: we vote based on quality. That's why I raised a custom flag to one of them stating:
this is exactly what was posted years ago and it is less recommended that the accepted answer. I guess it should be deleted because it is just a duplicate answer.
But it was declined with the message a moderator reviewed your flag, but found no evidence to support it.
What can be done in these situations? Is this an encouraged behaviour? Note I would like to distinguish two situations:
- Answers that are just the same → since they are good answers, should we flag them?
- Answers that are almost the same, but with a fragile approach → technically they are not wrong, just not that good. Should we downvote and let them drown to the bottom?