Recipe for abusing the system by late-parrot answers:
- Find old popular post (usually trivial question with trivial answers).
- Read top answers.
- Post similar answer, that adds nothing new of value.
- Grab pieces from several existing answers (not just one or two), to reduce deletion risk.
- Wait as, slowly but steadily, you get rep.
- Amass 1000 rep from such fraudulent behavior without ever losing it. (when old posts are deleted, the rep is not removed)
Moderately effective solutions:
Downvote
Not very effective. I lost 70 rep in 2 days downvoting such answers.
- You will lose huge amounts of rep.
- Risk of vote reversal if you accidentally downvote a user that systematically posts late-parrot answers.
- The parrot doesn't care. An answer with +10/0 score instead of +10/-1 means 100 vs 98 rep. Why would he care?
- Moderately effective against 0 scored questions, since it will make them less visible if negative... temporarily; the drive-by "upvote-everything-to-get-the-badge" will see to it. Also, if a post reaches the negative score 20k'ers can vote to delete (thanks @JimFasarakis-Hilliard).
Flag as NAA?
Since mods aren't familiar with all technologies, they will probably decline any cases that aren't clear-cut.
Flag for moderator attention
Currently i m guessing that this is your only option:
Answers that merely parrot information that someone has already provided earlier (for some significant amount of time earlier) in lesser detail don't add any value.
Cast a custom moderator flag, explaining the problem ("This answer is a duplicate of an answer already posted two years ago").
but do it sparingly:
Flag things as you see them. You don't have any moral obligation to comb the site looking for every one of these things.
I strongly disagree with the above, but this is what a mod said.
Do nothing
This would allow parrots to keep dumping trash and waste precious time of viewers. We don't want that.
Comment
You'll get serial downvotes; funny to see his downvotes reverted, but not funny if you happen to annoy a knowledgeable parrot.
More drastic measures
The late-parrot-farmers use some tricks in order to avoid deletion of their useless content. They sometimes modify slightly an example that already exists. They use a slightly different, yet useless approach (e.g. in Python: using __len__
instead of len()
).
A change in policy is needed against late-parrots' answers that farm the system.
Magnificent birds, but they need to be put back in their cage. We don't want to clean up their mess.