I've recently had a moderator flag declined for what I believe to be a plagiarized answer. Now I'm in doubt of what actually constitutes plagiarism.
Please compare these answers: #1 #2
The second answer was posted 28 minutes later and the wording has been slightly modified, but it says exactly the same thing.
For instance, answer #1 says:
That's expected behavior of
vertical-align: baseline
(default).
[...] resulting in the effect you see.
And #2:
That is expected behaviour. The
vertical-align
property by default is set tobaseline
which leads to the result.
The solution and code sample in the second answer is exactly the same as the first answer as well (with a slight whitespace difference). Note that, for those with not much CSS expertise, there is actually a dozen of ways to approach and solve this issue, which makes it rather odd for an "original" answer posted half hour after another answer to use the exactly same solution.
The only original and possibly useful part in the second answer is an outbound link, which I believe to not warrant a new answer — it should be a suggested edit or comment in the original answer.
I believe Stack Overflow would incentive improving existing content (Wiki style) rather than creating unnecessary duplication.
And in the case this is not considered plagiarism, seeing as the contents of both answers are licensed under the CC by-SA 3.0 license, an adaptive work such as the second answer should at the very least provide attribution to the first answer, doesn't it?
Or, am I seeing this in the wrong light?
:)
Although the voting process is anonymous, I just saw the timeframe to be quite suspicious and could only assume the downvoter to be the same as I don't see another reason to downvote a correct answer. But there is -