Edit: it looks like these deletions were justified, and more intensely peer-reviewed than it seemed - see the comments.
In an unrelated Meta question two questions came to light that had recently been deleted by several users:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42054478/calling-string-intern-before-first-literal-occurence
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42052932/sort-list-of-objects-based-on-objects-variable-frequency-in-descending-order
Those may be duplicates, but they are very decently worded. They certainly add value for future Googlers. The reason for keeping duplicate questions around is that the more different ways you have to describe the same problem, the better - as long as they point to a good original question.
Has this changed recently, is this some new policy I've missed?
You're a peer, and you're reviewing it.
oh come on now. My coming across those URLs was complete coincidence. (Unless there's a "recently deleted" queue I'm not aware of.)