The currently most upvoted answercurrently most upvoted answer says:
On site snippets are a good thing to have. We probably shouldn't reject these edits outright, just take a second to improve the edit by clicking the check box in the bottom on the snippet editor [to make them hidden by default.]
I posted a comment on the answer, too, but I think it merits an answer. I think that we have to reject these edits, as they can't be correctly approved by anyone except the original poster. I think that's especially the case when a poster has used a third party paste site as in this example. Editors don't have a way to know why the poster posted part of the code in the question and part in a third-party site. Maybe they were only comfortable with licensing a little bit of the code for Stack Overflow, and left the rest offsite to avoid licensing issues. (If that means the question doesn't include a MVE, then it can be downvoted, closed, etc.)
What this edit is doing is presuming that because OP asked a question on Stack Overflow that concerns some code that OP wrote, and includes some of that code, that OP presumed to license all of that code for Stack Overflow. Suppose you're working on a library licensed under terms not compatible with SO's licensing. You decide to ask a question about a snippet from it. Then someone realizes that that snippet is from your project on GitHub. Certainly that whole project doesn't become licensed under CC-BY-SA.
(The issue here doesn't relate to the upcoming licensing changes, but the upcoming changes do add some complexities. If we do accept these kinds of edits, then since OP's code was written pre-2016-02-01 and the question was posted pre-2016-02-01, what license would this code be under?)
That said, I think that this kind of edit is an improvement, but it's one that only OP can approve because of the licensing issues. Maybe we need a button for "suggest edit to OP" that skips the review queue. Unfortunately, that seems like a way to spam OPs.