Simple: plagiarism is posting someone else's words (code, prose) without making it clear that you are posting someone else's words. Note that this has nothing to do with copyright or any other legal concept; it is a matter of showing respect for the work of your fellow authors. If you're ever in doubt about whether attribution is necessary, then include it - it never hurts to show respect, and often hurts to withhold it.
Plagiarism is easy to avoid, and for most people it is a second nature; you generally wouldn't write an email to your co-worker by pasting together paragraphs from other emails you'd seen, and so you wouldn't post such an abomination on the Internet either.
But... It does happen. And a handful of users make such posts the bulk of their contribution to the site. Reasons can include...
- Calculated attempts to garner upvotes by appropriating material that has already been well-received elsewhere.
- A near-complete inability to write legible English on their own.
- Education in a culture that values re-use over composition, but does not stress attribution.
For this reason, we have put together a help center page that lays out some useful guidelines for folks unfamiliar with normal practices for quoting and attribution: https://stackoverflow.com/help/referencing
Authors who ignore these guidelines may find their posts deleted; those who repeatedly engage in this practice may find their accounts suspended or deleted.
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