I have been copying and pasting content from other answers or external web sources without attributing them properly. I've been made aware of this by the community, who are now angry at me and accuse me of plagiarism. Why is this, and what can I do to fix it?

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This is obviously a sister question to What to do when plagiarism is discovered?. Reviews, comments, and edits are welcome on both. – Pekka 웃 Dec 23 '12 at 14:43

1 Answer

What exactly is plagiarism?

In the context of Stack Exchange sites, any copying and pasting of any amount of text or code that wasn't written by you is plagiarism if you fail to acknowledge the original author, and to link to the original source. For a more detailed definition, see the Wikipedia article.

Why is plagiarism wrong?

You may not be aware of this, but plagiarism is considered a grave infraction in academic and professional circles around the globe. By plagiarizing, you steal someone else's work and pass it as your own, earning you credit and respect where it's not deserved. It's illegal in most countries, and can lead to dire consequences if discovered.

Specific to Stack Exchange, plagiarizing other people's work can earn you reputation points and the community's trust with zero effort. This angers users who give their valuable time, and often put hours, sometimes days of work into their answers.

But I only wanted to help!

Remember, Stack Exchange is not a support forum or a chat room. The goal of "helping" the asker does not justify copying content from elsewhere without attribution.

Your motives may have been perfectly good, but to the site's users it looks like you were trying to gain reputation points without putting any work in it, or adding any valuable content to the site.

I've been caught. How can I fix the situation?

If you've been caught plagiarizing, it's possible you'll get downvotes or angry comments from users. Stay calm and polite; showing an honest effort to fix what you did wrong is the most reliable way to pacify the community. Stack Exchange is a very forgiving place if you put in some effort.

If you know you have a lot of plagiarized contributions, you can help fix the situation by going through every one of them and adding attribution where appropriate (see below on how to do that). If you want multiple contributions deleted altogether, do not delete them yourself (as this may trigger internal alarms) but flag for moderator attention and ask for deletion.

It is possible that moderators suspend you, or delete some of your content if plagiarism has been discovered. You will most likely receive a moderator message detailing which, if any, measures have been taken.

How do I properly add attribution in the future?

If you want to reference an existing answer on a Stack Exchange site as part of your own answer, link to the answer and possibly even the author's profile. The attribution goes before the copied content so it's obvious to everyone who it's from. Copied content should be quoted in blockquotes.

Example:

As Peter Parker said in this answer,

Gotham City's sewage system was built in the 1910s. It consists mostly of concrete tubes, although some of them are ceramic. They're designed to withstand seismic shocks of up to 8.5 on the Richter scale.

the same rules apply if you want to reference an external source somewhere on the web. Paste the URL and point out who the author is. Note that external sources may be protected by copyright even if you add attribution. Instead of copying and pasting everything, use only chunks of text, and paraphrase what the source says. In copyright law, this is called fair use.

Duplicates

If you see a question that has been asked on a Stack Exchange before, do not copy & paste answers from the original question. Instead, vote to close as a duplicate, flag as a duplicate, or leave a comment stating that there is a good answer available already. Every time you do this, you actively contribute to the quality of the site, and help the asker, without having to resort to plagiarism.

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Keep in mind that the MSO FAQ serves the rest of the network, at least for the foreseeable future. The Skeet reference, however appropriate will probably confuse people trying to tell others how to pan sear a steak. – Tim Post Dec 23 '12 at 14:49
@Tiny, Mat - fair point. Changing "Overflow" to Exchange. Re finding a domain-unspecific example, yeah, that's difficult... hmm. Can anybody think of a "generic" example? I'll add a "programming answer" disclaimer for the meantime. – Pekka 웃 Dec 23 '12 at 14:51
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Generic is just generic. Invent some obviously fake names, with one citing the other and then enjoy some creative latitude in the citation? You can imply links rather than using them, doing so also serves emphasis. Or use example.org. – Tim Post Dec 23 '12 at 14:54
@Tiny done! --- – Pekka 웃 Dec 23 '12 at 14:56
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I never knew Gotham had ceramic poop tubes. That explains EVERYTHING. (yeah, I think that's fine). – Tim Post Dec 23 '12 at 14:57
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Thanks again @Pekka for hashing this out on both sides. You, sir are awesome. I'll bounce both by the rest of the mods and get both in place proper after Xmas. Happy holidays, you rep mining Gucci counterfeiting fellow, you! – Tim Post Dec 23 '12 at 15:01
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@Tiny you're welcome, and thanks for picking up the ball! This needed doing. Thanks and happy holidays to you, too! – Pekka 웃 Dec 23 '12 at 15:06
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Peter Parker Gotham City ಠ_ಠ – Ben Brocka Dec 23 '12 at 17:57
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@Ben ARTISTIC LICENSE FTW – Pekka 웃 Dec 23 '12 at 18:01
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@Pekka - This is awesome! Thanks for putting together such a great resource! I've flagged this so that a mod can add the FAQ tag. – jmort253 Dec 23 '12 at 23:05
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@jmort253 See comments above, I'll add the tag after Xmas (when both have had a day or two longer to soak). – Tim Post Dec 24 '12 at 5:39
Ah, I missed the "a lot" in the earlier sentence. (Cleaned up my comment.) – Arjan Dec 24 '12 at 11:20
What should be done if plagarized answer (without attribution) is highly upvoted? Should some rep be discarded? – Andrey Botalov Dec 29 '12 at 15:20

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