Prompted by this answer, and in particular this comment.
For reference, section (4)(c)(iii) of CC BY-SA 3.0 reads:
to the extent reasonably practicable, the URI, if any, that Licensor specifies to be associated with the Work, unless such URI does not refer to the copyright notice or licensing information for the Work
A Stack Overflow moderator has interpreted and implemented compliance with the aforementioned section in the following manner:
(a) requiring comment(s) by user A that are edited into user B's post and subsequently deleted, to attribute that comment's content by user A in B's post
(b) inserting a link to the comment(s) that will imminently be deleted into the post in question
Example: https://stackoverflow.com/a/4236294/70345
My question is simple: is this the official Stack Overflow policy regarding the procedure to follow when editing comments into questions and/or answers? If not, what is the official policy? If one does not exist, can it be defined? Finally, can all users be made explicitly aware of this policy?
My reason for asking this is simple:
- The vast majority of contributors to SO (including, until now, myself), are unaware of the need to attribute commenters when editing comments into posts, with the result that we aren't doing so. This means that CC BY-SA 3.0 is being violated on SO on a large scale.
- Deleted comments can only be seen by moderators. A link to a deleted comment in a question or answer thus appears to link to nothing for non-moderators. This is confusing and detracts from the content of the question or answer.
Edit, replying to comments
Stack Overflow shouldn't give you any "official" response other than "follow the license". To give any other response opens them up to liability.
The official policy should be that all sections of the used license must be fully complied with at all times. The thing is that the company rarely to never gives legal advice. They are probably kind of afraid it might be used against them.
Stack Exchange Inc. chose to require its users to conform with CC BY-SA. Therefore, it follows that SE Inc. is responsible for informing its users how to ensure their actions conform with this license. After all, if a user fails to comply because they are not informed, this opens Stack Exchange Inc. up to legal liability - therefore it is also in SE Inc.'s best interests to elucidate a formal policy.
One could go a step further and say it is in SE Inc.'s best interests to modify their platform to ensure that editing of content cannot be performed in a CC BY-SA-violating manner... except we know their stance towards (not) updating their platform.