I've been finding a lot of instances of plagiarism on Stack Overflow over the past few weeks, and having to point each instance out to mods for cleanup is a very time-consuming process, and frankly I just don't have the time to spend on hunting down each case alone like I've been doing.
I would be interested in starting a discussion on how we can improve the process of cleaning up plagiarism (beyond just manually going through a user's answers and googling each and every one for an original source), but first I'm interested in finding out some stats about it, such as (but not limited to),
- How many cases, on average, are reported to mods over a period of time (like a month)?
- Of the total reports, how many are true positives that result in answer deletion?
- How many true positives are merely edited to properly cite the copied source, rather than get deleted?
- How many users, on average, report plagiarism (like in a month)?
Of users who are found to have plagiarised, what is the distribution of their reputation (before answer deletion occurs)? For example, do 50% have < 1,000 rep, 40% have < 10k rep, and 10% have > 10k rep?
Why is this an interesting stat? Because I've found a lot of high-rep (over 10k) users who have plagiarised answers. Some were even close to 25k, "trusted user" status. If we come up with a new process for cleaning up plagiarism, I'd rather not have users who are potentially plagiarisers involved in plagiarism review.
- Of users who are found to have plagiarised, what is the distribution of their account age?
- Of plagiarised answers, what is the distribution of their age before they are discovered and resolved (either by deletion or editing)?
- Of plagiarised answers, what is the distribution of their score before they are discovered and resolved?
- Of users who are found to have plagiarised, how many are caught with new instances of plagiarism? In other words, how many continue to plagiarise with new answers, after they've been caught and warned about their first offense?
- Of users who are found to have plagiarised, how many are later reported for additional discoveries of old instances of plagiarism that they committed? This is different from #9, in that the user hasn't re-offended, but not all of his/her old offenses have been discovered and cleaned up yet.
This is probably going to be controversial, but I'd like to know if any interesting demographic data can be derived from the plagiarism reports, such as age, gender, and country distribution of offenders?
I think this would be interesting because the overwhelming majority (like 95-99%) of plagiarism cases that I find are committed by individuals belonging to a particular geographical region and culture. I know Tim Post has talked about the influence of culture on voting patterns among users before. I'm wondering if culture is going to be an issue if more SO users are involved in a new plagiarism review process? For example, would users belonging to a culture X tend to "go easy" on their reviews of other users from X who are discovered to be plagiarising?
Of users found to have plagiarised, what is the distribution of the percentage of their answers that are found to be instances of plagiarism? For example, out of all discovered plagiarisers, do 10% have 50% of their answers reported, 40% have 30% of their answers reported, and the remaining 50% have only 5% of their answers reported?
Of the X new SO accounts that are created every month, Y% will probably go on to commit plagiarism (either intentionally or otherwise) at some time in the future. I'd like to know what X and Y are if possible.
Etc.
Is it possible for a moderator or an SO employee to provide these stats?