The Pain Points:
For askers who treat SO as a help desk, a dupe closure is a point of frustration because they want to receive answers specifically tailored to their question.
For answerers who treat SO as a help desk (and say that they aren't here for the rep gains [...pfft]), a dupe closure is a point of frustration because tailored answers cannot be posted while the page is closed.
For duplicate close voters who strive to prevent the accumulation of redundant content and rep farming, FGITW help-deskers and non-curators create frustration.
For duplicate close voters who want to give tailored advice about how to implement the dupe target's advice, they can only shoehorn poorly-formatted text into comments under the question.
For careful/discerning answerers who are wary of answering a question which has a high probability of being a duplicate, they must burn minutes hunting for duplicates (while other users post carefree answers) despite being knowledgeable enough to answer immediately.
Answerers are not meant to also vote to close duplicates because it can be seen as a technique to block competing answers from being posted.
Despite SO's documented goal of getting answers on a specific topic in one place, duplicate close voting does not signal answerers to transfer their unique insights to the dupe target(s).
Despite SO's documented appreciation for some duplicated content, duplicate closed questions count toward a question ban.False asssertion.While some questions can be legitimately closed as a duplicate AND have some other aspect that makes the page unsuitable as a signpost, the system does not permit that dual distinction.
Eliminating the reputation benefit of asking and answering duplicate questions can only be combatted by downvoting content (which might not be merited based on question quality) and/or by deleting the closed page. For content curators, these actions are tedious, significantly draining of time, and can lead to revenge voting and/or re-open/close/undelete/delete wars.
The Solution:
Instead of changing the terminology from "Duplicate" to "Resolved Elsewhere" (which I have previously suggested), the new page status should be called something positive/optimistic: "Potential Signpost". The subtext for the page status can be like: "Significantly unique questions which have been resolved elsewhere may be retained to help direct readers to recommended advice."
All upvotes and downvotes on the page will be tracked/presented normally, however, all reputation changes (including rep cost for downvoting) will be held in escrow (potentially indefinitely) while the page is marked as a "potential signpost". Yes, this is retrospective -- all rep changes will be reverted upon the page becoming a signpost.
Contrary to all other close vote options, which indicate that the question is unfit for the site, there will be no answer-block implemented. This means that after a question has been labelled as a potential signpost, answers can continue to be posted -- even by the user who voted the page as a potential signpost, if they so wish.
This feature will be deliberately unattractive for rep-motivated contributors to bother posting an answer on potential signposts. Adding unique insights to the open target page(s), will be the simplest way to gain rep. As a secondary benefit, if a user who answered feels that the question and its resolving insights are sufficiently distinct from all other pages on SO, then they can vote to remove the potential signpost label. If successful, the rep points will no longer be in escrow.
To prevent unilateral selfishness in removing potential signpost status to gain rep, there should be no "un-hammer" privilege (except for moderators) for the potential signpost label. Honestly, there would no longer be a reason to rush the decision because answers can already be freely posted.
Wins:
Askers who ask good, clear questions will be allowed to receive answers even if they ask a question that has been asked/resolved elsewhere.
Answerers don't have to wait to post an answer after searching; they can rush an answer, then go hunting for a page which covers the same narrow topic.
Close voters don't need to rush to close for the sake of rep farming prevention. When the page is eventually closed, all temporarily earned rep will be withdrawn and held in escrow.
Those who would have ordinarily voted to reopen a borderline question just so they could answer will no longer need to vote to reopen and wait to answer; they can answer and express their argument for uniqueness in their answer.
Users who too zealously delete questions to prevent other users from earning rep from answering duplicates will no longer need to bother voting to delete -- while a potential signpost, no rep benefits will occur.
This new scheme will motivate users to seek earlier posted questions and post answers there for a real chance to earn rep -- this will breathe new life into pages that have been collecting dust.
SO and 3rd party search engines will have MORE total content on a potential signpost because answers were not blocked -- this will increase the ability to find vital keywords/phrases.
Ultimately, this gives users more freedom to share insights while reducing the grumpiness that many users encounter in the Q&A.
At a later stage, when signposts are accumulated, it may be appropriate to merge, reverse signpost directions, or delete pages based on their content quality.
Some Additional points:
Answers, while specifically resolving the asked question, may include compelling points regarding why the question is different/nuanced versus the page(s) to which the signpost points. This should not only help curators to resolve disputes, but also inform the asker and future readers about nuances.
Since this "experiment" may or may not be successful in creating a positive net impact, this feature should only be in effect for newly asked questions from the datetime when this feature is officially deployed.
In terms of question bans, it should neither be a good nor a bad thing that a user asks a duplicate question. If they ask a good, clear, on-topic question which happens to become a good signpost, then they are not doing any harm. If a user is posting low-value, unclear, off-topic questions, then this is obviously not desirable regardless of if the question has been asked or resolved elsewhere. Potential signpost status should not count toward a question ban.
Voters will need a UX separation for voting a question as a potential signpost versus an off-topic/unfit question. Ideally, volunteers should be able to signal both when appropriate -- that a question is, for example, resolved elsewhere AND unfit for the site under the other criteria.
Some thought should be given to the how Mortarboard, Epic, and Legendary badge calculations should work in the event that large sums of rep are released from escrow.
If this feature proves to be beneficial, then it can be incrementally applied to earlier years of content. If this feature proves to be harmful, it will be very easy to revert the applied changes -- all rep is taken out of escrow, question bans can be recalculated, and signpost pages will be closed as duplicates.
MyDate
, it's for the xth day with a variable calledFoo
, why do we need a 2nd near identical question?