I am referring to this specific question, particularly the last line that the author wrote:
This is not a duplicate of this question because the accepted answer is wrong.
I am puzzled.
I can't see why the content of answers would have an influence on the duplicity of the question. The questions are almost indiscernible from one another. As far as I understood, the stack-overflow-way of dealing with wrong answers is to downvote it, explain why it's wrong in the comment, and place a bounty on the question so as to attract new answers.
On the other hand, I do understand that that this method has flaws, and making a new question with a non-duplicate disclaimer (as the OP did) will attract fresher answers with the clear warning that the other accepted answer might be incorrect.
I just passed the 2k bar and the OP has more reputation on Stack Overflow than I do, but I don't fully agree with what they did there.
Am I missing something? In which situations is it acceptable to use such a non-duplicate disclaimer? Should I flag one of the two similar questions as duplicate, and, if so, which one?