There is a trend of people "surfing" by intentionally posting late blatantly duplicate answers on existing popular questions. This results in rep farming and noise and adds nothing to SO, and often makes things worse. Such answers tend to get flagged as duplicates.
Example: this Python question from 2010: Does Python have a string 'contains' substring method?
- The question is from back on 2010, Aug 9th
- The first two answers were posted the same day
- Both answers refer to
in
andstr.find
which are the most classic ways of finding a string in python. The answers are good & short.
- Both answers refer to
- Now in 2018 & 2019, people are "surfing" on this question wave to post redundant answers. Examples:
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/53923665/6451573
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/54552127/6451573
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/50887724/6451573
- All three have 15+ votes, but they basically repeat
in
andfind
methods, and they add bad methods (which areindex
andcount
) just to propose something different that no one would ever use... (a deleted answer proposes onlycount
and has -1 score) - This results in rep farming and noise; 30+ answers is probably enough to test if a string contains another.
There are exceptions/counterexamples:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/49531528/6451573, this one is from 2018 but suggests a totally different, novel way to do it. Contributions like that are always welcome!
When I joined SO network in June 2016, with 1 rep I personally wouldn't have dared to answer such questions. Instead I tried to answer new, less popular questions (duplicates sometimes, like beginners, but at least 25 correct answers weren't showing on the page when I answered...). Maybe it's just me...
What are our options for handling these answers?
- I'm tempted to use my moderation powers to delete those as clearly trying to benefit from the popularity of the question to garner unjustified upvotes. In fact, I had started to delete them, but undeleted them, because I wanted to have an open discussion with the community.
- convert the whole Q&A to community wiki: we would see if people want to copy/paste the same answers for zero rep.
- A toned-down version of the above would be to convert only the late blatant duplicate answers to community wiki
- Locking IMO would be unjustified; is this what locking is for?
Thoughts?