From the site's FAQ, this specific site allows candidates to consult books and web sites but not people. They're expected to work on their own.
So reading existing Q&A on Stack Overflow might be OK but posting a new question about their task to pass the assessment would violate their rules.
However, the asker said that their score was 14%, meaning that they've already finished this assessment. They aren't cheating; the test is over.
Generally speaking, I don't think we have to worry about too many people trying to cheat online assessments by asking a question:
They're usually timed and there's a very small window for completion, 1-2 hours. Getting someone on Stack Overflow to do it for you instead in that window would require a lot of luck. Not impossible, but someone relying on this runs the very real risk of no one who can answer even seeing it in time.
Someone trying to get an answer within 1-2 hours probably wouldn't have any of their own code or very little. This would likely result in their question being Too Broad (any answer would be too long) or Unclear (it's unclear what the issue is). Many users hate questions that are just a task.
Even someone who wanted to answer wouldn't necessarily get the right answer before time expired.
It would be especially difficult for new users under 125 rep because the system only allows them to ask once every 90 minutes and these tests generally consist of multiple tasks.
I think attempts to cheat are going to result in bad, off-topic questions that can be handled in the usual way.
As far as copyright issues go, per Heretic Monkey:
Moderators won't do anything about copyright violations unless the
holder files a DMCA request to remove it. See Dealing with a claim
that a post on SO is using copyrighted content without permission.