Timeline for Plagiarism from Wikipedia survived for 3 years in the C# tag excerpt
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Mar 13, 2016 at 8:59 | history | edited | Peter Mortensen | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
Copy edited (e.g. ref. <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/in-depth#Adjective>).
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Aug 16, 2015 at 2:27 | comment | added | bjb568 | AaronLS, you appear to have 5k rep, so haven't you reviewed any amount of tag wiki edits to determine that almost all of them are crap? | |
Aug 16, 2015 at 2:07 | comment | added | Nathan Tuggy | @PeterOlson: For that matter, the converse is also true: I've had at least one suggested edit unanimously rejected for attempting to get rid of plagiarized, uselessly-general material, despite a descriptive edit summary. | |
Aug 16, 2015 at 2:01 | comment | added | Braiam |
@NathanTuggy using [tag-wiki] wikipedia or copy as search terms may help you, remember there's also Meta Stack Exchange
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Aug 16, 2015 at 1:57 | comment | added | Peter Olson | I have good reason to believe that this is not an isolated problem, since I know that I have been guilty of letting this sort of thing happen a number of times; even though I'm an experienced Stack Overflow user recently, I didn't know these sorts of edits were problematic until recently, so I would expect that the average reviewer is not going to be effective against spotting plagiarized summaries. | |
Aug 16, 2015 at 1:38 | comment | added | Nathan Tuggy | @Braiam: Yeah, my thought was "anyone who thinks this is an isolated issue has been missing all the posts that cover the scope of it", but I haven't had time yet to really do the full sweep. Maybe a good check through revision history of the top 40 tags to see how much time they've spent in a plagiarized/uselessly copy-pasted state. | |
Aug 16, 2015 at 1:16 | comment | added | Braiam | "Unless you can show that this is a very prevalent and reoccurring problem in tag wikis" meta.stackexchange.com/q/102314/213575 circa 2011, so yes, it was a problem then, is a problem now. | |
Aug 15, 2015 at 22:25 | history | answered | AaronLS | CC BY-SA 3.0 |