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Copy edited (e.g. ref. <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/in-depth#Adjective>).
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Peter Mortensen
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"Are thousands of programmers on SO incapable of describing one of the most popular tags?" - Discord

It was wrong for the previous editors to plagiarize wikipediaWikipedia without attribution, without a doubt. HoweverHowever, that's separate from the idea suggested by your comment, that suggest somehow among the thousands of programmers we have an obligation to update tag wikis. Everyone contributes how they see fit  (within the guidelines). IfIf YOU think you are one of those programmers and think you are capable of describing the tag, then go for it!

Unless you can show that this is a very prevalent and reoccurring problem in tag wikis, that is so numerous that it presents an unmanageable workload, then I'm not sure that any additional process or rules are really worthy of the effort. It'sIt's essentially an ROI analysis problem.

You identified an isolated problem, and it seems you have the opportunity to correct this isolated problem just as you suggested, by writing a description that does not plagiarize Wikipedia. YourYour own advice is good advice, so I'm not sure what more there is than to suggest that you follow your own advice.

If you see that these particular editors are doing this kind of plagiarizing frequently  (some editors might not realize the first version was plagiarized, so I'd focus on the original author), and there is a definite pattern to this behavior, then alert a modmoderator. II think that kind of problem has been covered pretty thoroughly in other meta posts. 1) SeeSee a violation? 2) Is the user doing this repeatedly? 33) Tell a modmoderator about it. OtherwiseOtherwise you can fix the C# tag wiki and move on.

I know our instinct as programmers is to devise a preventative measure or sometimes out of frustration we want to see people punished. ButBut sometimes the ROI is not there. It'sIt's an isolated incident that can be dealt with relatively easily and doesn't need an indepthin-depth analysis.

"Are thousands of programmers on SO incapable of describing one of the most popular tags?" - Discord

It was wrong for the previous editors to plagiarize wikipedia without attribution, without a doubt. However, that's separate from the idea suggested by your comment, that suggest somehow among the thousands of programmers we have an obligation to update tag wikis. Everyone contributes how they see fit(within the guidelines). If YOU think you are one of those programmers and think you are capable of describing the tag, then go for it!

Unless you can show that this is a very prevalent and reoccurring problem in tag wikis, that is so numerous that it presents an unmanageable workload, then I'm not sure that any additional process or rules are really worthy of the effort. It's essentially an ROI analysis problem.

You identified an isolated problem, and it seems you have the opportunity to correct this isolated problem just as you suggested, by writing a description that does not plagiarize Wikipedia. Your own advice is good advice, so I'm not sure what more there is than to suggest that you follow your own advice.

If you see that these particular editors are doing this kind of plagiarizing frequently(some editors might not realize the first version was plagiarized, so I'd focus on the original author), and there is a definite pattern to this behavior, then alert a mod. I think that kind of problem has been covered pretty thoroughly in other meta posts. 1) See a violation? 2) Is the user doing this repeatedly? 3) Tell a mod about it. Otherwise you can fix the C# tag wiki and move on.

I know our instinct as programmers is to devise a preventative measure or sometimes out of frustration we want to see people punished. But sometimes the ROI is not there. It's an isolated incident that can be dealt with relatively easily and doesn't need an indepth analysis.

"Are thousands of programmers on SO incapable of describing one of the most popular tags?" - Discord

It was wrong for the previous editors to plagiarize Wikipedia without attribution, without a doubt. However, that's separate from the idea suggested by your comment, that suggest somehow among the thousands of programmers we have an obligation to update tag wikis. Everyone contributes how they see fit  (within the guidelines). If YOU think you are one of those programmers and think you are capable of describing the tag, then go for it!

Unless you can show that this is a very prevalent and reoccurring problem in tag wikis, that is so numerous that it presents an unmanageable workload, then I'm not sure that any additional process or rules are really worthy of the effort. It's essentially an ROI analysis problem.

You identified an isolated problem, and it seems you have the opportunity to correct this isolated problem just as you suggested, by writing a description that does not plagiarize Wikipedia. Your own advice is good advice, so I'm not sure what more there is than to suggest that you follow your own advice.

If you see that these particular editors are doing this kind of plagiarizing frequently  (some editors might not realize the first version was plagiarized, so I'd focus on the original author), and there is a definite pattern to this behavior, then alert a moderator. I think that kind of problem has been covered pretty thoroughly in other meta posts. 1) See a violation? 2) Is the user doing this repeatedly? 3) Tell a moderator about it. Otherwise you can fix the C# tag wiki and move on.

I know our instinct as programmers is to devise a preventative measure or sometimes out of frustration we want to see people punished. But sometimes the ROI is not there. It's an isolated incident that can be dealt with relatively easily and doesn't need an in-depth analysis.

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AaronLS
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"Are thousands of programmers on SO incapable of describing one of the most popular tags?" - Discord

It was wrong for the previous editors to plagiarize wikipedia without attribution, without a doubt. However, that's separate from the idea suggested by your comment, that suggest somehow among the thousands of programmers we have an obligation to update tag wikis. Everyone contributes how they see fit(within the guidelines). If YOU think you are one of those programmers and think you are capable of describing the tag, then go for it!

Unless you can show that this is a very prevalent and reoccurring problem in tag wikis, that is so numerous that it presents an unmanageable workload, then I'm not sure that any additional process or rules are really worthy of the effort. It's essentially an ROI analysis problem.

You identified an isolated problem, and it seems you have the opportunity to correct this isolated problem just as you suggested, by writing a description that does not plagiarize Wikipedia. Your own advice is good advice, so I'm not sure what more there is than to suggest that you follow your own advice.

If you see that these particular editors are doing this kind of plagiarizing frequently(some editors might not realize the first version was plagiarized, so I'd focus on the original author), and there is a definite pattern to this behavior, then alert a mod. I think that kind of problem has been covered pretty thoroughly in other meta posts. 1) See a violation? 2) Is the user doing this repeatedly? 3) Tell a mod about it. Otherwise you can fix the C# tag wiki and move on.

I know our instinct as programmers is to devise a preventative measure or sometimes out of frustration we want to see people punished. But sometimes the ROI is not there. It's an isolated incident that can be dealt with relatively easily and doesn't need an indepth analysis.