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I just failed the following audit and was thus suspended from reviewing.

A comment from a mod taught me that the seemingly innocent answer was copied without attribution from this off-SO origin.

I don't think there could have been any way for me to know this, or even to suspect this is the case. Are reviewers expected to research for internet-wide plagiarism in posts, similar to Wiki edits?


Some of the comments about spotting plagiarism of on-site answers are very informative and useful, but I'd like to clarify that the compexity here comes from the fact that this is off-site plagiarism. You can't tell that by checking out other answers.

Sure, reviewers can google every OK-looking answer to see if it's plagiarised (or open every review in a new tab to see if it's an audit), but is that considered something reviewers are expected to do?

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    Spotting plagiarism is so important for curators; learning how to spot it is something you learn. I, personally, have a mistrust of low reputation users who post content like what you saw in your review; especially so when the content is written like it had formatting and blocks of text that appear to be missing (in this case, the code wasn't copied from the source, making the answer quite disjointed).
    – Thom A
    May 27, 2022 at 15:52
  • You could notice the tone, google the content and see what you find.
    – khelwood
    May 27, 2022 at 15:52
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    Presumably the comment pointing out the plagiarism was not visible when you saw the answer?
    – khelwood
    May 27, 2022 at 15:56
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    @khelwood Yup, and I believe comments are never visible on First Answers audits, but I'm not 100% sure on that. It makes sense though because that would enable reviewers to interact with comments on deleted posts, see that they can't and figure out it's an audit
    – pitamer
    May 27, 2022 at 16:09
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    it'd be easier to just install an extension that makes audits obvious
    – Kevin B
    May 27, 2022 at 17:02
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    Related: Questioning plagiarism from outer source review audit
    – Henry Ecker Mod
    May 27, 2022 at 17:03
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    When reviewing I always check the original question if I have any hint of bad feels about the post or just got paranoid because it had been a while between audits. That happened often enough that I pretty much stopped reviewing. Too time consuming. May 27, 2022 at 17:13
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    "Are reviewers expected to research for internet-wide plagiarism in the First Answers review queue?" - When something is that obviously plagiarized, I would say the answer to your question is, absolutely. Learning to identify plagiarised content as others have said is important. Suspension from a single failed audit is unlikely, so that means, you have failed more than a couple of audits recently. Here is the reason it's so obvious, the answer is clearly missing text, specifically the queries that were suggest from the original source. May 28, 2022 at 4:28

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