To be clear, I'm aware of the proper procedure for reporting SCRAPERs, but I found it more pertinent to put it here as there was a lot of information I wished to articulate about the site and it didn't seem right to put all of it in the contact form.
So, I've found I particularly egregious SCRAPER called Stack Answers (I'd provide a link to their main page, but I don't want to give them any more visits than I already have).
Here's the site description:
[Stack Answers] is a site for Questions & Answers for professional and enthusiast programmers related to: java, android, php, c#, javascript, jquery, python, ios, c++, html, css, mysql, asp.net, objective c, sql, iphone, ruby on rails, .net, c, asp.net mvc, xml, r, json, ruby, wpf, ajax, angularjs, linux, django, sql server, html5, google maps, arrays, wordpress, node.js, eclipse, xcode, multithreading, regex, laravel, spring, vb.net, database, image, windows, mongodb, forms, facebook, apache, oracle and more... It's 100% free, no registration required.
Sound familiar?
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
It's a fairly large site, so I was surprised that I couldn't find any reports of it (if it's been dealt with before, please say so).
Examples of plagiarized content:
- Non-public API usage -> http://stackanswers.com/questions/26369633/non-public-selectors-in-payload
- This was the one that brought the site to my attention: it was third in the results of a Google search where the original Stack Overflow question was #1
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26455836/openshift-decodes-url-before-reaching-node-js-server -> http://stackanswers.com/questions/26455836/openshift-decodes-url-before-reaching-node-js-server
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26455842/i-dont-understand-rspec -> http://stackanswers.com/questions/26455842/i-dont-understand-rspec
(If you want a bit of humor, look in the source of this post and you'll see that the URLs are exactly the same (including post ID), with the exception of "overflow" being changed to "answers.")
You could, of course, also just go to their home page, click on any question, and Google its body to find the corresponding SO question (that's how I found the latter two in that list).
Alternatively, go to any question and change "overflow" to "answers" in the URL (it's very fast: you could even go to the realtime page and use the most recent question).
They provide no attribution (as far as I can tell) in the form of any author or link back to Stack Overflow, and it is quite heavy on the ads, so they're presumably making quite a bit of dough with this blatant plagiarism.