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Dec 28, 2022 at 22:05 comment added Peter Mortensen A first for me: A question where all answers (3) are the result of blatant plagiarism!!!!! (Wholesale copying - not a single word of their own. Answer IDs 72151136, 72155588, and 72161868.) Again, I don't particularly look out for them, so there must many many more out there.
Oct 24, 2022 at 20:03 comment added Peter Mortensen Plagiarism is more rampant than we realise, I think, including internally on Stack Overflow. Any late answer with complete English sentences is suspect. I don't particularly look out for them, but here is an example from today.
Oct 24, 2022 at 5:22 vote accept Adriaan
Oct 23, 2022 at 23:30 comment added Peter Mortensen Here is an example of such a plagiarised blog post on Medium. It is fairly typical of the plagiarism going on on Medium.
Oct 19, 2022 at 21:27 comment added Lance U. Matthews The answer says "check out my blog entry for details", but I'm not seeing what extra, in-depth information the blog is providing. It's not like the answer is just the relevant excerpts from a much, much longer blog post; the answer is the blog post just with the introduction and a couple tidbits removed. A simple "From my blog..." link at the bottom would have been better than, essentially, "Be sure to click through to claim the additional 2% of information I've withheld." I don't think such promotion warrants any consequences worse than leaving a bad taste in the reader's mouth, though.
Oct 18, 2022 at 14:15 history became hot meta post
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:50 comment added Thom A As I said, it's my interpretation, @cigien .
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:45 comment added Peter Mortensen It doesn't appear to be the case for that particular blog post, but the majority of blog posts on Medium being copied to Stack Overflow are already plagiarised (often 100% copied from some older blog posts somewhere else outside of Medium). There are similar problems with other platforms that don't take plagiarism seriously, like Quora and DEV.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:44 comment added cigien @Larnu That answer says "This includes reusing an answer you posted to ...". The "reusing" reads to me like the entire answer could be copied, and that would be fine. By any chance, do you have some citation/reference for the claim that "original", and "entirely copied content" apply to one's own content, or is that just your understanding of the rules, or how you feel they should be?
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:40 comment added Thom A @cigien that answer to me says that citation isn't required, not that the answer cannot be entirely copied.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:37 answer added Ryan MMod timeline score: 33
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:34 comment added Peter Mortensen Related: Answers entirely copied though properly attributed - e.g., "...simply tacking a "Reference" link at...a wall of unquoted text...does not count as proper attribution"
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:32 comment added cigien @Larnu The citation is in the link in my first comment. It's "only" a meta consensus, not a definition lifted from the help-center if that's you mean.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:30 comment added Thom A Do you have a citation for that intention, @cigien . As I read it, the content is entirely quoted (from the user in question's blog), and so the content isn't original in terms of the content on Stack Overflow (regardless of if it's catered for the answer or not). The fact the content is not catered for the question posted on Stack Overflow is a different problem.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:29 comment added Gimby What Larnu says. It seems pretty clear to me, thou shalt not copy wholesale. There are no exceptions, no corner cases, no ifs ands or buts. I get it though, I'm Dutch too. Simple rules are illegal according to our bureaucratic DNA ;)
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:29 history edited Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0
Made it clearer that I meant the lack of non-new content
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:27 comment added cigien @Larnu By "original" do you mean "bespoke", i.e. brand new content that is written specifically for the answer? That's not what "original" means in the "How not to plagiarize" guidance, there it just means "one's own work".
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:25 comment added Thom A I, personally, think that the main issue isn't that it's not cited, but that the answer contains no original content. The fact that the poster owns the copyright of the content is irrelevant, in my view.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:20 comment added cigien Given that even attribution is not required when copying one's own content that is previously published elsewhere ref, I don't see how block-quoting can be required.
Oct 18, 2022 at 13:16 history asked Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0