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Rejected.
This suggested edit was rejected about 3 years ago by Olin Lathrop‭:

Too wordy. Titles should be short.

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  • What is our position on picture identification with no research?
  • What is an appropriate response to picture identification questions with no apparent research?
Yesterday a user posted two picture identification questions with no apparent prior research.  The same user did this a couple of months ago too.  At that time, I spent a few minutes with Google Earth and was easily able to find where a couple of the pictures were taken, so I conclude that even the basic research wasn't done.

The site guidelines have this to say about researching questions before posting:

<blockquote>In addition to just making sure your question hasn't been asked already here, take a few moments to search beyond the site. If you put your question title into a search engine, can you find the answer to your question in the first three results? If so, perhaps consider alternative ways of sharing that information here on Codidact, or writing a self-answered question to share that knowledge.</blockquote>

Since I was able to find the location in a few minutes in Google Earth, it was clear that no research had been done.  When the two new questions appeared yesterday, it looked like the same thing.  If any research was done, it was certainly not mentioned in the questions.  They appeared to be just pictures, like two months ago.

I've left comments asking what the poster had already tried, but these comments were deleted.

This question is about how we want to handle picture-identification questions with no research.  What should we expect of people posting questions, and what should we expect of people commenting on these posts?  Does our response differ if there is a pattern of behavior?


Suggested about 3 years ago by Canina‭