My question in general is whether it's ok, in an answer to a Stack Overflow question, to put links to pages for which there's some reason to believe (not certainty) that they might be violating some copyright or other (U.S.?) laws.
So, not patently pirate sites, but for example forum posts that quote a considerable section of a (copyrighted) book.
All the existing answersI wasn't able to copyrightfind past questions I found herethat already addressed this matter; there are several specifically on meta addresscopyright, but they cover direct quotes rather than links.
A specific example:###
I found that a list included in a book I own (Code Complete) could answer very well a part of this question.
Given that quoting the entire list would with high probability be a copyright violation (just my feeling, I'm not a lawyer) - and that, given how concise the list already is, it would be largely impossible to rewrite it in different words or summarize it, in my answer I currently just put a reference to the book.
However now I tried to search the web for a sentence of that list and I found that a guy in a forum (on dreamincode.net) has already quoted the whole thing, along with the entire section of the book in which it is included.
I would not take the existence of that post as a proof that that section can be quoted freely by anyone, so I would still refrain from adding a plain quote to my Stack Overflow answer.
However I would like to add a link to that post, as it would be much more helpful than the current mere reference to the book.
However I'm not sure if even just putting such a link would be risky from a legal standpoint or in any case undesired on stackexchange. Thence this question.
I know it would help if I put here the link in question, but... err.. I don't know if I can do it!!!
Here in a meta question it might be more acceptable, if you tell me so in the comments (and possibly assume responsibility) I'll add it.
Owners of Code Complete can find the post manually by searching for an unusual-enough sentence of the 11.6 section.
Potentially relevant details of the specific example:
The author of the post does not state anywhere that he had obtained a permission to quote the book, or claim that he had otherwise the right to quote it for whatever reason.
He does reference the book, though.
A somewhat sneaky aspect is that he seems to claim that he typed that section manually, while it's almost sure that he copy-pasted it from an e-book (trying to copy a table included in the quote from my book's pdf results in one identical character-per-character to the one he posted).
That forum post was made in 2009 on a rather reputable site (https://www.dreamincode.net).
If it makes any difference, the profile of the author includes his full name and a photo of him, and he is a long-time contributor (32.000 posts) of that forum.