- Completely deleting the content, if you're not allowed to use it.
- Adding a reference and/or link to the authourauthor and the source.
- A separate review queue for wiki edits? They are not as multiple as ordinary edits, but require much less attention and reviewer expertizeexpertise.
If you are copying any part of eihtereither wiki or excerpt from other source, always follow the license agreement of that source. This can include attribution to the author and other requirements. ([see the manual on copyright issues)](url-to-a-manual-on-copyright-issues)
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- Maybe some plagiarism-detecting tool can be employed here, so that a wiki with borrowed text will show a waringwarning to the editor on the confirmation attempt.
The system detects borrowed content in this edit. Please make sure that you abide by the terms of a license agreement. Don't use content that you're not allowed to. Always give a reference to the autorauthor or/and source of the content.
Improving wikis and excreptsexcerpts besides the copyright issue
- Provide basic guidance on when to use the tag.
- Add disambiguatondisambiguation note, where necessary.
- Add a note on complementary tags.
- Reduce descriptions for popular and common-knowledge tags. Nobody reads the excerpt to learn about the subject. There's the full wiki, books, and the whole internet for that.
The StackOverflowStack Overflow (in English) is the origin of a growing family of localized SO sites. Users on those sites look up to the SO standards and try to follow them.
A problem emerged when a new user proposed an edit to a tag wiki excerpt on StackOverflowStack Overflow in Russian. That edit was just two sentences, copied from Wikipedia. The edit was rejected and the editor explained that since this is the default style for wikis on SO, then it should be acceptable on RU.SO.
So, it's a double responsibility. StackOverflowStack Overflow is an example to all of the localized SO sites, and maybe to many other sites on the network. Let's make it a good example.
With C# being a very popular programming language, its short description is definitely common knowledge among StackOverflow'sStack Overflow's audience.
I fail to see any offenceoffense in this post. What I see is confusion and disappointment, with a little bit of indignation. There certainly is an excuse for it. Dozens of reviewers approved a description which is 1) plagiarism and 2) just a bad wiki excerpt. I'm disappointed too.
Yes, the OP points at a mistake that the community has made in lots of edits and reviews. It's never pleasant when somebody points at your mistake. But it's not an offenceoffense, and even not blaming. It's a call to responsibility.