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I added some usage guidelines to in this suggested editthis suggested edit. One of the reviewers did see this as plagiarism and rejected on the basis of

This edit copies a significant amount of content from an external source. Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; ...

Most of the other reasons for rejection of suggested edits are subjective, and one cannot argue about them. "A significant amount" is also subjective, but I cannot find anything online that even vaguely resembles my addition:

Use this tag for YAML specific questions only, not for questions about programs that happen to have their configuration in a YAML format (use just their specific tags e.g.: jekyll, travis-cl).

I asked the reviewer (in a comment to an answer of his) where he found the source I copied from, but that question was not answered, the reason for closing being stated as "Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; try creating something useful to this community specifically". That on its own would be fine as it is subjective. But that is just a side note preceded by the more severe accusation of plagiarism.

Is it OK to contact a reviewer in this case (or similar cases) to ask for clarification?

Is this accusation of plagiarism recorded in any way? Or only if the post gets rejected? Or only on the basis of multiple people rejecting it based of "copied a significant amount of content"? Or not at all apart from the review history?

I am primarily interested because this is more serious then something not being useful or not significant. IMO a reviewer should be able to substantiate their accusation, even if the system currently doesn't allow them leaving even just a URL pointing to the copied content. But I don't know if there is an appropriate way to ask for that, whether one has the right to do so, and/or whether it should be done at all. And that partly depends on the fact that I don't know what the consequences are (if any).

I added some usage guidelines to in this suggested edit. One of the reviewers did see this as plagiarism and rejected on the basis of

This edit copies a significant amount of content from an external source. Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; ...

Most of the other reasons for rejection of suggested edits are subjective, and one cannot argue about them. "A significant amount" is also subjective, but I cannot find anything online that even vaguely resembles my addition:

Use this tag for YAML specific questions only, not for questions about programs that happen to have their configuration in a YAML format (use just their specific tags e.g.: jekyll, travis-cl).

I asked the reviewer (in a comment to an answer of his) where he found the source I copied from, but that question was not answered, the reason for closing being stated as "Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; try creating something useful to this community specifically". That on its own would be fine as it is subjective. But that is just a side note preceded by the more severe accusation of plagiarism.

Is it OK to contact a reviewer in this case (or similar cases) to ask for clarification?

Is this accusation of plagiarism recorded in any way? Or only if the post gets rejected? Or only on the basis of multiple people rejecting it based of "copied a significant amount of content"? Or not at all apart from the review history?

I am primarily interested because this is more serious then something not being useful or not significant. IMO a reviewer should be able to substantiate their accusation, even if the system currently doesn't allow them leaving even just a URL pointing to the copied content. But I don't know if there is an appropriate way to ask for that, whether one has the right to do so, and/or whether it should be done at all. And that partly depends on the fact that I don't know what the consequences are (if any).

I added some usage guidelines to in this suggested edit. One of the reviewers did see this as plagiarism and rejected on the basis of

This edit copies a significant amount of content from an external source. Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; ...

Most of the other reasons for rejection of suggested edits are subjective, and one cannot argue about them. "A significant amount" is also subjective, but I cannot find anything online that even vaguely resembles my addition:

Use this tag for YAML specific questions only, not for questions about programs that happen to have their configuration in a YAML format (use just their specific tags e.g.: jekyll, travis-cl).

I asked the reviewer (in a comment to an answer of his) where he found the source I copied from, but that question was not answered, the reason for closing being stated as "Generic descriptions such as encyclopedia articles and ad copy do not provide useful guidance; try creating something useful to this community specifically". That on its own would be fine as it is subjective. But that is just a side note preceded by the more severe accusation of plagiarism.

Is it OK to contact a reviewer in this case (or similar cases) to ask for clarification?

Is this accusation of plagiarism recorded in any way? Or only if the post gets rejected? Or only on the basis of multiple people rejecting it based of "copied a significant amount of content"? Or not at all apart from the review history?

I am primarily interested because this is more serious then something not being useful or not significant. IMO a reviewer should be able to substantiate their accusation, even if the system currently doesn't allow them leaving even just a URL pointing to the copied content. But I don't know if there is an appropriate way to ask for that, whether one has the right to do so, and/or whether it should be done at all. And that partly depends on the fact that I don't know what the consequences are (if any).

better incorporated tag into title
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psubsee2003
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Tag wiki: How to handle accusation of plagiarism by a Tag-Wiki edit reviewer

edited tags; edited title
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smci
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Tag wiki: How to handle accusation of plagiarism by reviewer

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Anthon
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