Eeeeeek! > In this use case, finding a duplicate is the same as providing a correct answer. Sure, if the duplicate is *accurate*. If you have one or two, you have a high probability of accurately finding a correct dupe. If you have *five*, then I genuinely don't believe you have a correct dupe at all. I strongly maintain that one who closes with five different reasons is just piling on. You *do* touch on the main problem here, which is: > It might also slow down the flood of experienced users answering questions that should be closed as dups. Searching for duplicates is a **broken system**. ***Absolutely no incentive*** to reward dupe finders will work reliably, fairly or accurately until this is ***fixed***. As an experienced user, it is an order of magnitude faster to type the answer than it is to go off hunting for a nuanced and ***very well hidden*** dupe. That's not to say I wish to profit or proliferate this behavior; this is just how bad the system's gotten. It's *so* bad I can't guarantee that even if I see an NPE question, when I type NPE that I'll get back the canonical NPE question for Java. It takes extra time and effort to actually locate it. Then there may be *other* unique types of NPEs; for example, if you get an NPE when you autowire a bean in Spring is ***not*** the same as your run-of-the-mill didn't-instantiate-an-object-and-now-I-wanna-dereference-it-NPE. Think the current search system's going to be able to detect that context? Well, it doesn't now. No sense in rewarding anyone until the dupe-finding system is actually **working**.