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replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do?A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't think it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't think it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't think it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

very minor typo
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From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't thisthink it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't this it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't think it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.

Source Link

From A site (or scraper) is copying content from Stack Exchange. What do I do? on Meta Stack Exchange:

Can I do anything myself?

Absolutely! While larger cases of mass violations will require the Stack Exchange team's intervention, smaller cases where a user simply wasn't aware of our attribution requirements do not require us to get involved. If you see a blog post which copied our content and it's just a one-off deal, you should feel free to contact the author as a concerned member of the community. There is nothing wrong with a user pointing out the rules and hopefully getting an author to fix their content as well as educating them about our attribution requirements.

In other words, you can contact the author of that blog to tell him that they can't copy Stack Overflow content without proper attribution, but I don't this it's worth contacting Stack Exchange team.

As for linking to his blog from Stack Overflow answer: that link doesn't add anything to that answer, so I edited it out.