To give detailed specifics we'd need to do something to track it, which would also mean adding more complexity to delete votes and flags; something we'd like to eschew unless it became a really rampant problem that required special handling.
I can say that mods on Stack Overflow on average deal with it at least 3 - 5 times a week. But that's the thing about averages, they don't really show you that there were zero incidents over 4 months, followed by 12 in a single week. What I'd like to point out is, it's not always done maliciously, or turns out not to really plagiarism at all once we look into it.
The most blatant cases are:
- Spammers trying to unlock comment privileges quickly
- New users trying to get rep quickly, often after not being as successful as they hoped through their own composition
The fringe cases are:
Folks from a country / culture that doesn't have a sense of copyright or ownership in works. They see a question, know there's a great answer to it on another, and just post it trying to be helpful. Language barriers are a major consideration here, This says exactly what I want to say better than I can say it, so I'll just copy this.
Questions where there's basically, well, one good answer and multiple people begin to write what turns out to be basically the same answer in different ways. They usually post within a few minutes of each other, and sometimes accusations ensue.
The best advice I can give for handling any of these is, assume good intentions in the person until they prove you wrong. You can't be sure that someone isn't just trying to be helpful until you talk to them; communication rarely works when opened with accusations.
If the answers are all on the same question and posted within a few minutes of one another, there's nothing more to talk about - it's very likely not plagiarism. Having the same answer written a few different ways just helps to ensure that someone will find at least one of them easy to understand. If you're sure it was a wholesale copy, involve a moderator.
If it's a copy/paste from another question (or even another off-site resource) the best thing to do is flag for mod attention, and the best course to start looking into it is a simple comment like:
Hello, did you mean to provide a link to [this thing] for attribution and credit? It looks like you forgot.
You're not accusing anyone of anything, if they don't respond (or respond with something along the lines of 'so what?'), then it's time to have a more serious talk, and probably remove the content.