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Further to my earlier post about a⁠—now deleted⁠—plagiarised collectives article, there are a number of articles which are exact duplicates of articles posted elsewhere. They all appear to have been re-posted by their original authors. This is in violation of this guideline:

  • Articles should not be exact duplicates of existing Q&As or articles.

By my count, there are 9 articles in violation of the guideline (although I don't know if it's a violation to post an article on SO, then post elsewhere). I'd guess there's likely to be some issue with licensing, depending on the websites to which the article is posted and in which order.

Anyway, 9 of the 18 current Collectives articles are just re-posts of articles posted elsewhere.

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    "I'd guess there's likely to be some issue with licensing, depending on the websites to which the article is posted and in which order." This is unlikely to be the case, unless one of the other websites requires an exclusive license to the content (Stack Overflow does not have such a requirement). Generally, authors retain full rights to re-license their contents to others, even after licensing it to one site.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 2:42
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    Did you expect anything else from the "in-depth product knowledge that’s only on Collectives", @Joundill? We warned SE multiple times this is exactly what's going to happen, and yet, here we are. Jun 1, 2022 at 3:13
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    Eh, @chivracq, please do forgive me if it sounds a bit unconsiderate, but can you use a more... conventional method of getting the point across? I am honestly struggling with parsing the meaning of the above - are you saying it's to be expected (with which I agree - we all knew this is going to happen) or that this is not a big deal (with which I don't agree because I think it's important to call this "feature" on every occasion where "we told you so" - maybe one day SE will start to listen instead of boldly going where everyone has been before) Jun 1, 2022 at 4:09
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    None of those articles are duplicates of Q&A or other Articles (as in the Articles present here on Collectives). The help center also states: "However, the article does not necessarily need to be (but ideally is) content written exclusively for the collective. That is, repurposed articles would be allowed, but they must be resident on Stack Overflow, in the collective." - this seems to indicate that duplications from elsewhere on the web is permissible.
    – Catija
    Jun 1, 2022 at 4:41
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    @Catija my reading was that exact copies of articles from elsewhere were not allowed, but that content may be repurposed (i.e. modified) to fit in to a Collective's Articles.
    – Joundill
    Jun 1, 2022 at 4:49
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    I'd say this would constitute a violation of goodwill towards the community if that loophole is going to be applied as "oops, we meant Articles", @Catija. It is quite clear that the community agreed with articles being unique content just as any other content on Stack Overflow. We do not allow plagiarism of tag wikis/exceprts even if the source allows free distribution. We also do not allow the same for questions and answers unless the source is provided. I am pretty sure Articles posted on other sites first violate CC-BY-SA license, btw. Unless those are prefaced with [1/2] Jun 1, 2022 at 4:56
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    [2/2] "originally podted on <link to the article>", I believe they are in violation of if not this guideline but the license's terms. We warned the company this is going to happen, and this is no surprise to us, but it does not change the fact that the situation is unacceptable if the company wants the community to accept Collectives and Articles as valid first-class members of the site. Jun 1, 2022 at 5:00
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    @OlegValteriswithUkraine None of that (license violations or plagiarism issues) is the case if they are posted in both places by the author. As I noted in my first comment on this post, the author has the right to license their content to multiple sites under whatever terms they choose. Nothing in CC BY-SA forbids that (as long as none of the licenses are exclusive).
    – Ryan M Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 5:03
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    On the bright side, there's not any other plagiarism at the moment.
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 5:51
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    @ZoestandswithUkraine what a foreign concept, to look at things from the bright side on meta :)
    – Gimby
    Jun 1, 2022 at 10:07
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    @Gimby Small victories in the field of constant defeat :p
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 10:54
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    @OlegValteriswithUkraine The CC BY-SA license only applies if the place where the person obtained the text is licensing it under CC BY-SA (e.g. on SE). In general, the copyright holder requires no license and doesn't need to comply with any license, other than they need to comply with their side of any terms they have already entered into, which for CC BY-SA is that the copyright holder can't grant an exclusive license, because there's already a license which can't be revoked.
    – Makyen Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 13:36
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    So, no, the copyright holder isn't required to give attribution to themselves for their own content (exclusive of any modifications made by others on SE). We'd like them to mention that they've also posted the content elsewhere, so nobody thinks it's plagiarized, but doing so isn't required.
    – Makyen Mod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 13:37
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    Note that plagiarism is already rampant on Medium and DEV (And Quora. I don't know about LinkedIn). No matter what their licenses or terms of service formally state, none of those platforms take plagiarism seriously (exactly nothing is done when blatant plagiarism is reported). So what looks like self-plagiarism may be actual plagiarism. The content should be checked first for plagiarism at the place with the oldest publication date. Jun 2, 2022 at 17:00
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    It is already the case for at least one of the examples here. The exact phrase "Identity-Aware Proxy (IAP) TCP forwarding to enable administrative access to VM instances that do not have external IP addresses or do not permit direct access over the internet." from a Google Cloud article was plagiarised by Vishal Bulbule on Medium (the first example listed here). Jun 2, 2022 at 17:19

3 Answers 3

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When Zoe pinged me about this (as mentioned in her answer to the other question), I checked internally while leaving the comment I did above. Specifically, I talked with Philippe and some of the team working on Collectives. After having those discussions and seeing the feedback here, I've updated the Help Center post with the following goals:

  • Disambiguate between "Articles" and "articles" (as well as making sure that "Collectives" was always capitalized rolled this back as it goes against our guidance).
  • Making the bullet point that explains our policy regarding reposting content from elsewhere on the internet more clear rather than having it be a subset of the link-only post policy.
  • Encourage reposts to mention and link to the original post.
  • Explicitly require that Articles be the original work of the person posting them.
  • State that plagiarized posts will be removed and may have consequences.
  • Clarify the quoted text in the question - Articles may not be reposts of content on Stack Overflow, whether a Q&A post or another Article.

Because y'all can't see the edit history on the Help Center article, I'll include the major changes below.

Explaining reposting content expectations:

In the original text, we used the term "repurposed", which led to some confusion about whether the content could be identical. Philippe clarified that "reposted" was what was intended, so that's been cleared up. I also separated this into its own bullet so that link-only Articles was one bullet and information about reposting content from elsewhere was its own bullet with two sub-bullets, one about linking to the original source and one about the Creative Commons licensing. I also made some minor improvements to the link-only text.

Before

  • Link-only articles are not acceptable. If an article contains links, it must have sufficient context, and content must be resident on the collective. However, the article does not necessarily need to be (but ideally is) content written exclusively for the collective. That is, repurposed articles would be allowed, but they must be resident on Stack Overflow, in the collective. It’s also important to recognize that anything posted to our site is licensed under the Creative Commons license as well.

After

  • Link-only Articles are not acceptable. If an Article contains links, it must have sufficient context that visiting the links is not necessary, and content must be resident on the collective.
  • An Article does not necessarily need to be (but ideally is) content written exclusively for the collective. Reposting your own content from elsewhere on the internet is allowed, provided it meets the other guidelines.
    • When reposting content from elsewhere, the author is encouraged to mention this fact and link to the original.
    • It’s also important to recognize that anything posted to our site is licensed under the Creative Commons license.

Addressing content ownership and plagiarism

I added content to two sections to address this. In the "Quality" section, I added a new statement about post ownership:

  • Articles must be the original work of the author posting them, or - in the case of multiple authors - the poster must be one of the primary authors.

And in the Code of Conduct section, I added an explicit mention of plagiarism:

  • Plagiarized Articles will be removed and may lead to moderator action.

Clarifying statement about reposting content from elsewhere on Stack Overflow

Your question currently quotes this bullet in the Code of Conduct section as being the crux of your question:

  • Articles should not be exact duplicates of existing Q&As or articles.

As noted, I discussed this with Philippe and the intention here was to only prohibit duplicates within SO, not from outside the platform. We definitely encourage the content to be unique (and that's explicitly noted in other sections of this document), but it would be difficult to require it - our posts are licensed as Creative Commons, which specifically allows reuse.

To clarify the intention of this bullet, I've rewritten it:

  • Articles should not be exact duplicates of existing Q&As or Articles on Stack Overflow.

The changes above are live. If you see any additional improvements or clarifications that can be made to these specific concerns, please let me know in the comments. If there are other concerns about this article unrelated to this, please ask a new question about more generally improving this Help center post.

This guidance was automatically updated for Collectives customer-facing documentation when I updated the Help center, so there's parity between the two.

Thank you for bringing this point of confusion to our attention so that we could clarify the documentation. Also, we appreciate you identifying the plagiarised Article so that the moderators could act to remove it. Plagiarism is not acceptable on our platform and we appreciate the work the mods are doing in conjunction with community members relating to identifying and removing plagiarised content.

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    Your work in clarifying intent and bringing this to a close is appreciated here. Thanks for taking point.
    – Philippe StaffMod
    Jun 1, 2022 at 21:01
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    So we're completely fine with people re-posting their old blog posts as Articles in order to gain rep?
    – Joundill
    Jun 1, 2022 at 22:25
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    @Joundill I can understand your concerns but there's no indication that's actually happening right now. If people start posting old content (particularly in bulk) we can address those concerns but all of the Articles in your question were posted very closely in time to when the original post was created, so I'm not really sure if it's something we need to address immediately. The oldest original was from October 2021 and the Article was posted 8 months ago... which is essentially the same time.
    – Catija
    Jun 1, 2022 at 23:03
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    So it's allowed for the time being, and not a problem until it's a problem?
    – Joundill
    Jun 1, 2022 at 23:22
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    What weird (and wrong) "guidance" that a proper noun used in its proper-noun context as the name of a specific product would not be capitalized. It is especially problematic when the name of the specific product also happens to be a noun in everyday usage. The linked guidance needs to be changed, both because it's grammatically incorrect and because it's actively misleading/harmful. In fact, it isn't even internally consistent. The first bullet point is correct; the derivations from it are not. Also, and not coincidentally, "Internet" is always capitalized, since it is a proper noun. Jun 2, 2022 at 9:57
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    And, while these changes certainly do improve the guidance, they do nothing to address the elephant in the room, which is that, as noted in the question, "9 of the 18 current Collectives articles are just re-posts of articles posted elsewhere". This pretty conclusively proves that, at least so far, Collectives (see what I did there?) has been a complete failure because it is not adding any value to the site itself or to the Internet at large. If it's just a place to repost stuff that is already available elsewhere, legalities aside, it is not useful. We lose nothing by having mods remove it. Jun 2, 2022 at 10:02
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    Thanks, @Catija, the guidance is definitely better now. However, I fully agree with Cody here - it still does not address the elephant in the room that those reposted articles do not provide any value whatsoever since they are "we just post it here too, I guess" blocks of text. If the company wants to convince the community that Collectives have any value, "encouraged" is simply not enough by a long shot. Who's going to encourage posters? Is this stressed to the admins? Or is it just a piece of text nobody will follow since there is no way to enforce them? One simple change would [1/2] Jun 2, 2022 at 10:22
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    [2/2] make it enforceable: they should be required to be unique pieces of content lest they want to be deleted. And no, the licene is of no concern here, since it does not force the company to keep content that does not adhere to its own guidelines. Jun 2, 2022 at 10:27
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    Now that we see the Collectives tour is literally recommending plagiarism, touting a major advantage of the new editor as being that it makes it drop-dead easy to copy-paste content that already "exists elsewhere", I think we're getting a better picture of what y'all really intend to happen with Articles and/or on Collectives more generally. In light of this, your efforts and attempted reassurances ring extremely hollow. (That elephant just put on a Zoot suit, cranked up the tunes, lit a disco ball, and started dancing in the middle of the room.) Jun 3, 2022 at 8:39
  • In regards to the "complete failure" comments, 9/18 copied also means 9/18 new articles, so that is 50% success and added value for the community, could be better but far from a complete failure.
    – Marijn
    Jun 3, 2022 at 9:44
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    I don't know about you, @Marijn, but where I come from, when I was in high school and university, completing 50% of the task was considered a "failure". That aside, the fact that 9/18 Articles are not copied only means they are not copied, not that they have added value for the community. Jun 3, 2022 at 10:29
  • @OlegValteriswithUkraine in my country 50% is also a failure but 55% is seen as sufficient, so only two more original articles and the feature will get a passing grade - however, a better comparison might be the questions asked on SO daily, even if less than half of those are good then we don't conclude that SO is a complete failure, only that improvement is possible/needed, but we still appreciate the remaining questions that are good.
    – Marijn
    Jun 3, 2022 at 10:49
  • Now if the non-copied articles actually have value is a different question, I just wanted to point out that the feature is not just used for copying, it is also used to provide new information that might be of interest. Therefore it is imo not fully warranted to dismiss the feature completely based on those 50% copied articles.
    – Marijn
    Jun 3, 2022 at 10:52
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    @Marijn We haven't really looked at the other 9 articles here closely. Maybe they are suboptimal for other reasons. The most telling thing next to the high self-plagiarism rate is the low total number. 9 actual articles within many months is not much. Almost everyone seems to dismiss the feature currently. And that is even though there are guidelines for articles that seem reasonable to me. It's not that people don't know how articles should be written. They simply don't want to do it. Jun 3, 2022 at 20:20
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Paraphrasing what Cody said in his comment, the elephant in the room is that 9 out of 18 Articles are duplicates of content from elsewhere.

It looks like exact duplicates of existing articles being posted as Articles isn't something unexpected, but is a key feature advertised by SE to prospective Collectives customers in their Collectives tour:

Screenshot of collectives tour showing "Copy and Paste" feature

The orange pop-up captured in the image above contains the text:

Our editor makes publishing content easy - choose the Markdown or WYSIWYG version. If the content exists elsewhere, simply copy and paste and your formatting comes along for the ride.

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    Wow. Just wow. For those who can't read screenshots, there's an orange pop-up (with horrible on-hover-only behavior that makes it oh-so-inaccessible) that says: "Our editor makes publishing content easy - choose the Markdown or WYSIWYG version. If the content exists elsewhere, simply copy and paste and your formatting comes along for the ride." So, yeah. Not only are they pushing that absolutely garbage editor, but the major selling point that they've gotten out of it is that it makes plagiarism easier than ever. I'd say "unbelievable", but... it really isn't anymore. Jun 3, 2022 at 8:34
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    @CodyGray the tour mentions easy copying, this is not the same as encouraging plagiarism in case the person posting the Collectives Article is the same person that wrote the copied article. In the examples in the OP here the authors are the same so the guidance so far did not lead to plagiarism, only to easy copying, as intended (except if the original article was already plagiarized).
    – Marijn
    Jun 3, 2022 at 9:41
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    @Marijn: Re "is the same person": That is not a guarantee at all. Within a few days, by essentially random sampling (suggesting the plagiarism is rampant), I have seen more than one example of the plagiarism taking place at Medium and then copied to Stack Overflow. One instance is the first example listed in this question. If it is copied from Medium, DEV, or Quora, it is highly suspect. Jun 3, 2022 at 10:56
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    @PeterMortensen I agree that that is a problem, but I don't think you can blame SE for this just because they provide and advertise a copy-paste feature with the legitimate use case of reposting your own articles. Now if this is desirable is another question, maybe not, but you can also argue that this helps to make potentially useful information reach a bigger audience - however the main point is that linking this text from the tour to plagiarism is somewhat one-sided in my opinion.
    – Marijn
    Jun 3, 2022 at 11:12
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    "...the elephant in the room is that 9 out of 18 Articles are duplicates of content from elsewhere." And the twin elephant is that there are 18 articles in total or 9 unique ones, for a feature that exists for a year. Not exactly strong growth and indicates that articles is mostly an unused feature. Jun 14, 2022 at 15:59
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    @Trilarion I think there's also a zebra or small rhinoceros hiding behind those two elephants. SE has just released Bulletins™ for timely content, this content has already been on-topic for Articles™ over the past year, but nothing of the sort has been posted.
    – Joundill
    Jun 15, 2022 at 0:10
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Just concentrating on a small legal aspect that might be of relevance here. Catija's answer also goes into that direction in section "After".

Authors must of course make sure that the content they are going to contribute to Stack Overflow can be published under the current subscriber content license. This includes checking that if said content is already published elsewhere it is not published exclusively there. Depending on the content licenses of the platforms where the content may already have been published (Medium.com, dev.to, ...) that may or may not be the case. If the content was already published exclusively, a verbatim copy would not be possible legally, however a somewhat altered version would probably be fine.

And a general comment: There is not much value in copying 1:1 from somewhere else, although there might be some. If articles are supposed to be useful, they should probably be adapted to the audience here and to the problem they are trying to solve. That would also conveniently avoid any legal problems that might or might not arise.

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