I recently posted an answer to this question, and was dismayed to see that the asker accepted an answer that was (in my opinion) plain wrong. Briefly put, the question was asking whether SQL Server needed to be installed if an application was written to use it, and the accepted answer started with "No" in bold, and then proceeded to explain that actually, the answer was kinda yes.
As irritating as it was to see someone accepting a wrong answer, what happened next was weirder. The accepted answer began to attract downvotes and comments, and in response, the author of that answer edited it to include various clarifications that people were posting. They also quoted my entire answer verbatim at the top of their answer.
I'll admit, I'm a little annoyed at this, but my query here is more about the practice of improving already-accepted answers. If an accepted answer turns out to be wrong, but another answer on the question is correct, is the author of the accepted answer within their rights to replace the content of their answer with the correct information, or is that considered dishonest? I can remember one or two cases where I've posted an answer that's been accepted, and I've come back to add further information, so it feels like only a short step from there to correcting bad information, but when that information comes directly from someone else's answer to the same question, that starts to feel like plagiarism.
Full disclosure: I flagged the answer for attention, because it feels like bad etiquette, but I did not call for deletion, because in the end, the asker accepted it as correct, so I guess it must have helped them somehow.