Browsing Stack Overflow today, I found a question which has an answer that literally combines 2 other answers from this question, the only addition being a link to read more about the problem. Now, the question is whether this is considered plagiarism, or is a good way to improve the answers (although I read on Meta that the copy paste of answers is not really encouraged)?
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27You certainly don't get less plagiarism by adding plagiarism together.– jscsCommented May 4, 2017 at 13:29
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related/dupe: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/300586/…– NathanOliverCommented May 4, 2017 at 13:29
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The linked posts in your question are not a good example, as they should be closed and not answered. But in general, copy-paste two answers won't be much helpful. However, you can add your own explanation and conclusions while quoting (and linking) the original posts.– MarounCommented May 4, 2017 at 13:30
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The plagiarized answer didn't even add the link to read more, it was in the original answer from the other question.– BarmarCommented May 5, 2017 at 16:35
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In fact, it doesn't look like he combined two answers from ther previous question, he simply copied the first answer almost verbatim. The only change was that he added a little wording before the link to the developer.android.com site.– BarmarCommented May 5, 2017 at 16:37
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1This is actually a tricky question, because in the early days of Stack Overflow, there was this idea that we wanted canonical answers. That is, each question would have One Best Answer, and if the answer really is as good as possible, then in principle it could stand up as the question's Only Answer. And the only way to do that in the face of multiple good answers would be to (potentially) incorporate all the best stuff from other answers in one super-answer. Yes, it would have to add value beyond just being a copy-paste job. But borrowing/aggregating was encouraged at one point.– John YCommented May 5, 2017 at 16:43
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Just to finish off my previous comment, I could have sworn I read something by Jeff Atwood or Joel Spolsky to that effect.– John YCommented May 5, 2017 at 16:45
1 Answer
It's not encouraged.
If it's a verbatim copy of another answer without attribution, and the answer has no value of its own if you remove all the copy-pasted stuff:
Flag for moderator attention (custom flag, "plagiarism from...")
Add a comment explaining that copying & pasting without attribution is not encouraged on Stack Overflow, and that they should add content of their own even when using other people's work as reference. Posting this link can help.
Especially with new members, it's important to comment politely. Chances are they didn't mean any harm; there are different attitudes toward plagiarism across cultures.
On the other hand, if you feel like a bit of plagiarism-hunting, where there is one instance of plagiarism, there's often more. Here's a FAQ page with helpful tips what to do when discovering plagiarism.
If the case is less clear - for example, the answer still adds value even if you remove all the plagiarized content - you can fix the situation by yourself by editing in a reference, replacing the copied content by a link, and/or adding a comment giving the author advice for the future.
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5You shouldn't really be commenting on posts like this at all. It's the moderators' job to handle the situation; let them.– ServyCommented May 4, 2017 at 13:34
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2Maybe if we stopped calling it "plagiarism" and started calling it "stealing", these people from "other cultures" would finally understand that this behaviour is not acceptable. Commented May 6, 2017 at 16:45
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3@BoundaryImposition: You can certainly make a case that it's possible to "steal" something from someone without actually depriving them of it -- the RIAA and MPAA have been making that case for years, with mixed success -- but simply calling it "stealing" is not likely to be sufficient to convince someone that your culture's perspective is superior to theirs.– ruakhCommented May 6, 2017 at 22:47
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1@ruakh: shrug Not convinced. I think it sounds stronger all around (technically correct or not). Merely saying "you plagiarised this" apparently doesn't evoke "oh, maybe I shouldn't have done that" in all of our visitors. Commented May 7, 2017 at 0:16
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1@BoundaryImposition The trouble is not so much the ownership aspect of it (we all "adopt" code from Stack Overflow into our code bases without attribution, that's fine), it's the act of creating duplicate content on the site. Calling it plagiarism or stealing is missing the point, unnecessarily confrontational and can be left entirely out of the discussion of why one shouldn't willingly create duplicate content on Stack Overflow.– GimbyCommented May 8, 2017 at 14:01
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@Gimby: "we all 'adopt' code from Stack Overflow into our code bases without attribution, that's fine" It really isn't "fine" Commented May 8, 2017 at 14:38