I've noticed a lot of link-only answers that I could theoretically fix by simply sticking in an appropriate quote from the link, but I just don't have the patience to trawl through gazillions of pages of dense legalese to see if maybe this site would allow copy-pasting certain parts, hmm, maybe if I apply this part of the fair use doctrine, but what about…. And since I edit several hundred posts a month across the network, I think it's fair to assume a lot of editors would have similar feelings, if not more so.
(In some of these cases, I might have the technical background to have a decent shot of summarizing the answer from the link given, but since I almost always run across these in review, I'm not eager to spend twenty minutes digging into one answer's background to try to reconstruct the author's frame of mind when I could be handling a couple dozen other posts instead. So that's out.)
However, if I knew that I didn't have to make a tricky determination of the legal situation every time, I think I could justify the minimal effort of finding a suitable-looking quote to pull rather more easily. And hopefully this would apply to others as well, especially if we publicized this a bit.
Therefore, is there a cheatsheet of relatively common websites that always/usually/seldom/never have CC-BY-SA-compatible content to directly haul into link-only answers?