Consider this question:
HashSet removeAll method is surprisingly slow
It was posted in 2015. It has a fair number of upvotes, a handful of favorites, and one accepted answer with a pretty good number of upvotes. It's a reasonable question that exposes an interesting technical issue, and the answer is accurate and relevant.
The issue is that the question was quite clearly copied almost directly from an old article by Jon Skeet:
https://codeblog.jonskeet.uk/2010/07/29/there-s-a-hole-in-my-abstraction-dear-liza-dear-liza/
This article is dated 2010. To cross-check this, I dug up the article in its old location from the Wayback Machine:
If you look at Skeet's article, it's pretty easy to see that much of the text of the question is directly copied (with light editing), the code is the same, and the results are the same, even down to one of the timing results of 178131ms!
What's weird is that Skeet's article includes an explanation, a quotation from the specification, and some discussion, that's not included in the question. I'm not sure what would motivate someone to do this. (The SO answer includes the same quotation from the specification, but it also cites some code, and it has different discussion. It's not plagiarized.)
What, if anything, should be done about this?