Well... What's your goal?
I've seen folks on some forums answer the same question every day for years.
I've seen folks answer the same question until they couldn't bear to answer it anymore.
I've seen folks throw up their hands and post "search, damn you!" in response to every new instance of some common question, and I've seen forums where the first page of posts was entirely pinned topics, the "canonical" list of frequently-asked questions. And of course, they were still asked every day.
I'm sure you've seen these things too. And from these arises the utility of duplicate closure.
When we started out here, "Exact Duplicate" worked pretty much the same as every other close reason. There was no prompt for a link, nor a means of displaying them; if you knew the question had been asked previously, you closed it - same as if you knew the question was off-topic. Sometimes folks answered the question with a link to a previous one prior to closing, sometimes they'd drop a link into a comment, or edit it into the question itself, or... do nothing. The system we have grew up out of an ad-hoc process that folks who were closing questions developed; a sort of bookkeeping to forestall arguments over whether questions were being closed appropriately.
In the past 30 days, 4% of all questions asked were closed as duplicates, comprising roughly 40% of all questions closed (10K stats). That's almost certainly lower than it should be, but still represents a significant increase from just a couple of years ago (when only about 2% of questions were closed as duplicates); most of this increase can be attributed to two major changes:
- Askers can trigger the closure of their own questions by confirming that a proposed duplicate is accurate.
- Tag-badge holders can instantly close any question in their tag as a duplicate.
Critically, neither of these changes does anything to directly encourage folks to find duplicates (rather than just answering). But, as I hinted above, most of the motivation there is intrinsic anyway. Two years ago, 4% of questions had duplicates suggested; today, that's 6% - it would appear that the growth in duplicates closed matches the growth in duplicates found, which in turn spiked as soon as we made bothering to find them more effective.
So back to your question...
Why find duplicates?
Might as well ask, "why answer questions" or "why write blog posts" or "why write documentation" or heck, "why write a novel". Many people are moved to do these things, and many people benefit from their work... But that doesn't mean you should. We certainly have enough novels.
Reputation is meaningless, an entertaining game to play while you're here but not particularly valuable, particularly once you've turned your attention elsewhere. If you wouldn't answer without reputation, then chances are your answer isn't going to be worth much with it; OTOH, if you enjoy writing answers but are sick of writing that answer, being able to mark new questions as duplicates of old ones relieves a certain tedium for certain particularly driven people.
But maybe not you. If not you, then do something else.
Related: