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Sep 7, 2015 at 0:05 history edited Seldom 'Where's Monica' Needy CC BY-SA 3.0
Added a headliner.
Sep 6, 2015 at 23:55 comment added Seldom 'Where's Monica' Needy @AleksandrDubinsky The copyright-issues would definitely need consideration... however, since having on-page annotations would reduce plagiarism, one might argue that it is a safer way to go. In most cases it should be hard to make a legal stand basically saying "Someone made a site that lets people discuss my content and I'm mad about it so they need to stop." as opposed to "Someone made a site without my permission that duplicates content I and/or my organization worked hard to create."
Sep 5, 2015 at 17:26 comment added Aleksandr Dubinsky Beside mere "comments", we could have edits (changing the text of the page), links (like are used on SO), mouse-over-links/annotations, examples, and related questions on SO, all hosted around the original page. It would be a wonderful abuse of copyright.
Sep 4, 2015 at 15:03 history edited Seldom 'Where's Monica' Needy CC BY-SA 3.0
Some phrasing tweaks for clarity.
Sep 3, 2015 at 21:13 history edited Maxime Pacary CC BY-SA 3.0
just moved a misplaced parenthesis
Sep 3, 2015 at 5:13 comment added nbering I agree with the general idea that this idea is best pulled off as a collaboration between the existing docs sites and Stack Overflow. Possibly by means of some sort of widget or API. Or maybe the solution is the build a documentation site engine of sorts that links with SO on some level so that questions and answers linking to topics can be marked to indicate that the linked documentation has changed, but also be able to look back at it's state when the link was made. This could help avoid the duplication/fragmentation issue and still solve the problems that are proposed to be solved.
Sep 2, 2015 at 18:07 comment added Seldom 'Where's Monica' Needy @AleksandrDubinsky SO has a good record of attracting hits through search-engines. If original page-titles are duplicated along with the right metadata, we could probably get it so that the comments/examples/revisions would show up in search-results as their own page, right above or below the original document assuming relevant search-criteria. Comments could be done as threads, atomic comments sorted by score (like SO answers or comments on PHP's docs) or for actual revisions: a git-style commit for a given page, treating the original page as the basis commit so we wouldn't have divergence.
Sep 2, 2015 at 6:19 comment added Aleksandr Dubinsky I think this is an interesting idea. I wonder how far you can take this. Google Translate transforms existing pages without hitting copyright issues. Will such transformed pages show up in search results? How far would we go in transforming them?
Sep 1, 2015 at 20:48 history answered Seldom 'Where's Monica' Needy CC BY-SA 3.0