I recently asked a question, mentioning (in the very first version of the question) why a particular technique wasn't suitable.
A user marked the question as a duplicate of another, which stated to use the technique that I had mentioned did not work for this problem.
SO's automated tool asked me to edit my work to show the difference. As I had already specified why that technique did not help in the original edit, and I was angry the user didn't bother to read the question, I left a rather shouty edit drawing attention to what I'd already written in my initial release of the question. I don't like to shout, but it felt like nobody was reading the question, when the question:
- mentioned I was aware of that technique's existence in the question in the very first version
- mentioned why it was not appropriate for the question in the very first version
- linked to the official docs for that technique in the question in the very first version
The angry edit was removed (which I can understand) but it looks like the moderator, rather than acknowledging the question wasn't a duplicate, marked it as being 'unspecific'.
I believe 'unspecific' was a deliberate retaliation - the question's title is 'Is it possible to create different shadow colors on different sides using CSS box-shadow?' which is incredibly specific.
Oddly many users seem to have found the question interesting as there were many answers, including two particularly good ones sent both on chat and on discussion.
How should I handle a user who seems to be retaliating to a user pointing out errors in their marking decisions?