I find this topic very interesting,(more details below), but are we barking up the right tree?<br/><br/>

The way I see it the best ways to gain rep, for those who put their score above the effectiveness of the site as a whole, is to produce dupes or near dupes. 

Restated: By policy we say no dupes but the system actually rewards better for dupes. 

Note: those who don't put their score above the effectiveness of the site will post questions because they need answers and will answer questions because there is a need, regardless  of the impact on their "score"

So the below points are stabs at a few adjustments which may help to make gaming the system much less rewarding.

Reasoning:
----------

I rarely if ever find the need to ask questions, (and slightly less rarely a need to answer). There's already so much here that I really don't need to ask many new questions, & answers I might give aren't usually really an improvement over answers already given. 
<br/>The above fact, however, is detrimental to my reputation score, which is pretty low considering how often I use the site.
<br/>
Here's the most interesting part (to me @ least):<br/>
If I did care more about my reputation score, the best way for me to get a better score would be to find a popular, fairly straight forward question and tweak it a little, make my own post, then watch the answers pour in. As [Jeff Atwood pointed out][1] in the article Robert Harvey linked in comments, this isn't necessarily bad. In theory, this will help more users more easily find an answer to their questions.
<br/>So, given that the above is true, we can fight duplicates indefinitely because the system rewards them. Alternately I suspect tweaking the reputation system might be more effective than the more brute force methods we are used to.<br/><br/>

Some Thoughts:
----------

 - -Programmatically decrease point rewards for questions that share a high percentage of text with an older, already answered, & well
   traveled/upvoted answer.

 - -Revist the duplicate finding algorithm (possibly add a second which checks after the question has been written but before it gets
   posted... could likely make it the same check that assigns reward
   value)

 - -Provide higher rewards for questions that are unique (both for upvotes on the question as well as the answer... because answering
   obscure questions, theoretically, provides a wider breadth of answers
   & topics... because we really don't need 1000s of questions on
   javascript closures [not saying we have that many but once a topic
   has been beat to death but always gets answers we are more likely to
   get duplicates... because it's easier to ask than to read all the
   answers to all the variations of the same question])

 - -Decrease rewards for users who's reputation score increases past 1K for questions asked... we don't need to motivate these people to ask
   questions, we need to motivate new users who just don't feel as
   comfortable asking... these people will ask regardless (but with
   generally lower/attainable seeming scores new users may be less
   likely to attempt to game the system)

 - -Decrease rewards as scores get higher anyway, this might tend to decrease the desire to quickly answer simple questions (without
   researching if they are answering something that's already been
   answered)


Sorry I think this stuff through too much :D. I would, however, be interested in hearing other peoples thoughts.
  [1]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/243035/show-related-questions-immediately-after-posting