Suppose the dev team marks issues A and C as duplicates and issues B and C as duplicates. If I think A and B are duplicates but are independent from C, then it turns out that's not the case, will that count as 2 incorrect counter-arguments or one? It's the same counter-argument but I would need to respond to two duplicate markings separately in this case.
Hi Prof,
Suppose the dev team marks issues A and C as duplicates and issues B and C as duplicates. If I think A and B are duplicates but are independent from C, then it turns out that's not the case, will that count as 2 incorrect counter-arguments or one? It's the same counter-argument but I would need to respond to two duplicate markings separately in this case.
Thank you!