This is something of a follow-on to Are answers which merely summarize other answers acceptable?.
I came across this answer to How can I clear the NuGet package cache using the command line?. Just as I was thinking "Wow, what a succinct yet comprehensive answer designed for readability..." I saw the note at the bottom stating that it's "... a rollup of all the existing answers ...". Upon further inspection, the answer contains one bit of its own commentary ("(can be used in a .bat
file)"), one section that rewords and reformats another answer but also embeds its screenshot, and at least three sections that were copied verbatim from parts of other answers.
I, personally, don't see the value in such an answer and the answers to the linked Meta question would seem to agree, but if one were to try to "fix" such an answer, how would they do so?
- Edit the answer to note in a prominent location that its content (largely) originates from the other answers.
- Edit the answer to blockquote all content copied verbatim from another answer.
- Edit the answer to mention the author of the answer from which each section of content originates.
- Edit the answer to link to the answer from which each section of content originates.
- All of the above.
- Leave a comment suggesting that the author do any or all of 1-4.
- Do nothing. (The answer is fine as-is.)
- Downvote.
- Flag the answer (as plagiarism/lacking adequate attribution).
- Vote for deletion. (The answer is currently +22/-0, so, for users with that privilege, that doesn't apply?)
- Something else.
If it were me I'd choose 5 (and probably 7, for these reasons) just to be thorough and as a courtesy to the authors of the other answers, but I don't know if that's what's required nor if that's what's appropriate (from the standpoint of content curation). Also, there's not a lot of "meat" to each section of the answer, so I don't know if a code snippet with little or no text really rises to the level of plagiarism.
I've read How to reference material written by others and other Meta questions on the matter, but I think what makes this tricky/unclear is the source of the content is not only internal to Stack Overflow but internal to the question. Therefore, do the usual attribution rules still apply, or is it enough to say "This content comes from somewhere on this page" and leave it to the reader to determine where and from whom?