Today I have rejected several elegant, clever, clear, and otherwise high quality contributions to Documentation. It's the type of thing that you see in books and official websites, which is where it was taken from. Without proper citation.
We don't want this, just like we don't want plagiarism elsewhere. There's a reason already to reject plagiarism:
- copied content
Includes content that is copied from another source without proper attribution.
I'm really glad that they added a field for the URL. That was added literally yesterday (July 27, 2016).
Unfortunately, I'm not sure this is enough. If I select the option and nothing else, it will probably just get approved by the next person, who doesn't see my reject reason until after clicking approve. (Luckily, in some cases, others have noticed that the content doesn't really fit and have rejected it for other reasons. As the comments say, there are also some other people out hunting for plagiarism, which is helpful too.)
Obviously there are others with similar concerns, like the one here. But the answer confirms there's not much in place.
My suggestion is:
- The URL provided by the first reviewer should be shown to all subsequent reviewers.
- Rejecting with this reason should raise an automatic moderator flag. It's already work discovering plagiarism in the first place, so the rest of the process should be as smooth as possible.
Possibly some type of automatic ban if enough claims are brought up. (I just picture all SO mods being sleepless and spread too thin, so there should be a way for the community to handle things.)
Also consider a similar system for the vandalism/spam reject reason
Related: I found this really great tool for comparing the differences between the proposed original and the edit. Just input both URLs and look at the differences (it also includes all the irrelevant text on both pages, but it's the best I found without rolling my own).