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jonrsharpe
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Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( aa book  ) on a niche platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflowStack Overflow. SkimmingSkimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two different StackOverflowStack Overflow answers ( bothboth of which I posted in 2017  ).

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflowStack Overflow? II have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. II know the booksbook's author's StackOverflowStack Overflow account. IsIs there any SOPprocedure for handling a situation where a known StackOverflowStack Overflow user plagiarizes your content.?

Context

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( a book  ) on a niche platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two different StackOverflow answers ( both of which I posted in 2017  )

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the books author's StackOverflow account. Is there any SOP for handling a situation where a known StackOverflow user plagiarizes your content.

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication (a book) on a niche platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on Stack Overflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two different Stack Overflow answers (both of which I posted in 2017).

Is there any recourse through Stack Overflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the book's author's Stack Overflow account. Is there any procedure for handling a situation where a known Stack Overflow user plagiarizes your content?

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Context

I feel like this question must've been asked but I cannot find any relevant question.

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( a book ) on a specificniche platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two other different StackOverflow answers ( but at least the entire page wasn't a copy/pasteboth of my answer ).

This is a very nuanced issue on a not-so-popular platform. And, when troubleshooting this issue, there was absolutely no relevant documentation. Additionally, it was like 1000 words copied verbatim ( but screenshots changedwhich I posted in 2017 ), so I know its my work.

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the books author's StackOverflow account. Is there any SOP for this?handling a situation where a known StackOverflow user plagiarizes your content.

Context

I feel like this question must've been asked but I cannot find any relevant question.

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( a book ) on a specific platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two other answers ( but at least the entire page wasn't a copy/paste of my answer ).

This is a very nuanced issue on a not-so-popular platform. And, when troubleshooting this issue, there was absolutely no relevant documentation. Additionally, it was like 1000 words copied verbatim ( but screenshots changed ), so I know its my work.

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the books author's StackOverflow account. Is there any SOP for this?

Context

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( a book ) on a niche platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two different StackOverflow answers ( both of which I posted in 2017 )

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the books author's StackOverflow account. Is there any SOP for handling a situation where a known StackOverflow user plagiarizes your content.

Source Link

Any recourse for answers put in commercial publication without credit?

Context

I feel like this question must've been asked but I cannot find any relevant question.

Several weeks ago I was reading through a commercial publication ( a book ) on a specific platform and noticed it contained, verbatim, a long form answer I posted to a question on StackOverflow. Skimming through the rest of the book I identified code that was copied from two other answers ( but at least the entire page wasn't a copy/paste of my answer ).

This is a very nuanced issue on a not-so-popular platform. And, when troubleshooting this issue, there was absolutely no relevant documentation. Additionally, it was like 1000 words copied verbatim ( but screenshots changed ), so I know its my work.

Question

Is there any recourse through StackOverflow? I have read this and since I was not given credit it violates the license agreement. I know the books author's StackOverflow account. Is there any SOP for this?