I happened to get plagiarized (from my point of view) about 7-8 minutes after posting an answer. Not word for word, but enough to raise a question and make me look at that user's other answers. Out of 5 total answers (including the one I left from), 3 were plagiarism.
So I decided to act on it. At the time I didn't know very much about how plagiarism is dealt with on SO, so I posted a comment asking the plagiarist why he posted the same solution after me. He admitted to seeing my answer before posting theirs and replied something similar to "You said it first, I said it second. What's the problem? Do you know any other right answer to this question?". Unfortunately, that comment has been removed now. Also, my initial comment that was raising the question got removed too and I really don't understand why. It was articulate and it wasn't using any type of offensive language. (I'm guessing all the deleted content is still there? Maybe someone with sufficient rights can take a look at it and let me know why it was removed?). Anyway, later in the discussion, the user invited me to flag all "similar answers" on SO and than get back to his.
At that point I flagged the question for moderator attention, stating that the user repeatedly reformulates correct answers to questions. The flag was rejected as
declined - flags should only be used to make moderators aware of content that requires their intervention
After reading whatever I could find on SO about plagiarism, including this question where I understood that at least there are some users that see my point of view, I re-raised the flag, linking the above question and I also flagged the other two cases I found for this user.
Under another plagiarism related question here, on SO Meta
, I found a comment stating that plagiarism of answers on the same page does not qualify as plagiarism, while someone else claimed you should specify the source even if it's present in the same page.
NOTE: the three flags I have raised have been solved favorably and the answers were removed, rendering the links below useless for anyone unable to see deleted content.
I am aware that, from the three plagiarism cases of this user (my case, other case and other case), mine is the least blatant. But I think the other two (posted at 2 years, respectively 6 months after the original answers) indicate this user's general position towards plagiarism.
Like many others, I put time and effort into my answers, usually trying to be as helpful and correct as possible, keeping in mind that other people might see and use that code. I usually explain the rule/principle, trying to teach how to solve that type of problem rather than provide a specific fix for the case.
I believe I am right here and the said user is wrong, in his approach and attitude. If this gets settled in their favor it will certainly be an incentive for them to keep on plagiarizing and for me to stop investing time and effort in better quality answers.
It's not as much a matter of stolen coin (reputation), but of principle. I'd like to point out I am really open to discussion. Genuinely curious about how this subject is viewed/dealt with on SO and ready to consider and accept different points of view from my own.
Addendum
I'm adding this days later, after the question has drawn some attention and quite a bit of feedback, which helped change my point of view on this subject to such a degree I thought I should point it out.
I wrote the initial text when the flags I raised seemed to have low chances of being accepted. The accepted answer (of this question) has the huge merit of opening my eyes, presenting the facts from a different perspective and helping me focus on what matters most. This is why it is the accepted answer, although (by having my flags solved favorably) it has become, technically, wrong. in conflict with how the flags were resolved.
I was caught up between the feeling I was the only one seeing the elephant in the living room and a sort of disappointment because people didn't find it important (at the time I thought they don't mind/care about plagiarism).
Thanks to all the feedback, I now know I over-reacted.
Yes, there was an elephant in the living room, but it was painted on the wall. Woot4Moo's comment made me realize that technically, by definition, plagiarism should not even apply to code, as most of it is not created. It's not (most of the times) a form of art. It's a construct we learned, a convention, so it doesn't belong to us. We can't present it as ours. At most, it's our "preferred way/method" of solving some problem.
But what we are actually doing here, on SO, is sharing knowledge. Or, as SO mission states, we are making the internet better. And we are helping each other. This is probably the most important part of the picture and yes, I was missing it.
I wouldn't have come to this understanding and focus on the bright side of SO, have I not asked this question. Or maybe I would have, but it would have taken me considerably longer.
Thank you SO, for your response.