I often come across posts where the title has been incorrectly modified to include a home-made [solved]
tag. Where this edit has been made, often the solution has been added as an addendum to the question, rather than the OP adding a self-answer.
Where this happens, I used to ask OPs to roll back their edit and re-post an answer, but most of these requests were unheeded, and I suspect a proportion of new users would not see the point of the clean Q&A separation we like here.
I thus started to do this myself, and would do the following. I would roll back the OP's question to the last good question state, and then take their answer text, and post it as a Community Wiki answer, with the following prefix:
(Posted solution on behalf of the OP).
[Answer pasted here]
For the avoidance of doubt, the quote block is to show it here, and I don't use a quote block in practice. I've been doing this for several years and have only just received a suggestion that I need to post these differently. Where I post these, I sometimes suggest to the OP that if they wish to re-post the CW answer under their own name, I will delete my copy (perhaps one or two have done so).
However, a high-rep user recently edited one such post to a format they believed did not violate the attribution guidelines, so the new post format was:
The following was written by the question author, (name & link), in revision (revision link) of the question.
[Answer pasted here]
Thus, their answer included the author's name, the author's profile page link, a link to the revision where I made the edit, and the answer was added in a large quote block below the introductory paragraph.
My interlocutor added this in a comment:
If you leave out the author's name, the link to the content, and don't properly indicate that quoted content is a quotation, then you are not only meeting the site's definition of plagiarism, but violating the site's CC-BY-SA licence by not properly attributing content, making it a copyright violation. If you don't have the time to appropriately cite some content, then don't copy the content. Just deciding to not properly cite content isn't appropriate.
I replied that I felt this was too much work, given that I made it clear that it belonged to the "OP", and they replied again:
You disagree that it's a problem for you to plagiarize content and violate other people's copyright rights? That's...just not okay. Again, if you think it's too much of a burden on you to not plagiarize content when copying other people's content then don't post the content. The site's licence and legal page (as well as the help center page on plagiarism) are quite explicit in what is required.
Now, whilst I agree with the spirit of attribution guidelines (e.g. to disallow the stealing of other people's answers in order to acquire rep from their work) I think this interpretation is a bit overblown. Furthermore, adding an answer in a large quote block feels rather over-formatted to me, and makes it less readable than posting it as if the OP had done so.
I admire the purism of my interlocutor's interpretation of the guidelines, and I say that knowing I can be a bit of an OCD stickler myself. However, I think my having moved ~410 such answers into the right place, and foregone any rep points for having done so, is significantly better than giving up this sort of edit because the posting requirements are too onerous.
I would therefore like to ask the community if this interpretation of the attribution guidelines is widespread, and thus whether I should stop edits of this kind, given that adding other bits and pieces is not only a fiddle, but swamps answers with irrelevant material. What do you reckon? I am happy to defer to popular opinion here.
Update
Whilst I am looking for community answers here, both for and against the strict interpretation of the attribution guidelines, it occurs to me just now that Stack Overflow might like to give an answer themselves. I would very much welcome that too.