I thought that the answer to this question was an obvious "no". But these three users, all with much more experience on StackExchange than I have, evidently disagree. They each use very similar language to claim that their posted content is licensed under something other than the CC-BY-SA. For example:
The major identifying parts have been blurred as a minor courtesy, in case the user decides to alter their profile and they do not want this version trivially associated with them. Anyways...
The "dedicated to the public domain" link in the above image points to the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication 1.0 license (CC0). All three users linked use the same "All original source code I post" phrase in their profile text, though not all of them "relicense" to the CC0.
Is that allowed? Can a user apply a content license other than the default CC-BY-SA, simply by stating so in their profile? If not, can they do it any other way?
EDIT to differentiate from the proposed duplicate:
The proposed duplicate's accepted answer's infographic shows that the content is published by the original author, somewhere other than SO. That's a fairly specific condition and I'm not sure how it changes answers to my question.
Specifically, the CC0 does not require attribution. Say someone (Not the original author. Maybe a StackExchange laywer?) wants to legally pursue a clearly copied-from-StackOverflow snippet of code that is published elsewhere without attribution, but the original snippet author has a CC0 license clause like the one above. Is that copyright case now invalid because of that author's clause, even if that author hasn't published it himself elsewhere?
Alternative, simpler phrasing: if the content is not published anywhere else, but the user claims a CC0 license, is attribution no longer required?