tl;dr: It's time to stop letting people add stolen content to our site's tag wikis. Reviewers are letting this through, so let's start with the reviewers. These users are reviewing incorrectly and harming the site. Let's set a policy that approving blatant plagiarism will get you a short break from review.
Before reading this, read Let's stop tag wiki plagiarism. That post was met with a fair amount of support, so now I propose we move on and implement a few things.
In the previous post, we established that approving plagiarism is abuse. We've been tolerating that abuse for too long; it's time for it to stop.
Let's set a simple policy: Approving blatant plagiarism is a one-way ticket to a review ban. Here's my (fairly conservative) definition of 'plagiarism' in this case:
The edit must be recent; we don't want to go through a whole backlog and ban reviewers who aren't doing anything wrong today. This is, essentially, a statute of limitations. Something that happened two days ago should be flagged; something that happened two weeks ago probably shouldn't. Use your judgment.
The plagiarized part must be substantial such that it qualifies as creative content. This should be determined by a moderator, but it's generally clear cut.
There must be no attribution to the original source in either the tag wiki or excerpt. It's not plagiarism if it's attributed.
This should serve to eliminate most of the edge cases we would have with this. Everyone caught by this needs to be approving unquestionably bad things.
Implementation details / FAQ:
How long should the ban be? I don't think this needs to be long at all - just long enough to get the reviewers' attention. A single day would suffice in the vast majority of cases.
What if I don't want to take the time to check for plagiarism? You don't have to review tag wiki suggestions. Checking that no content is plagiarized is in the job description; if you don't want to do it right... there are plenty of other things you can do. You can always just skip tag wiki suggestions.
What if a reviewer becomes disgruntled and leaves/stops reviewing? As with any change, there will be people who are angry. Some people seemingly like plagiarism and think it's okay. It's not, we established that in the previous post.
Given that, we should be okay with alienating a few reviewers. We're not starved of reviewers for suggested edits on Stack Overflow; we don't need to put up with people approving rule-violating content.
How do we warn reviewers that this is taking place? I do think that we should do everything possible to reduce the shock this has on reviewers that have been happily approving copied content since forever. I'd propose that we do a few things:
- Create a featured meta post clearly delineating what is changing and why, along with the new penalty to be imposed upon people not reviewing correctly. Simply featuring this one would work.
- Change the guidance offered to reviewers in the Suggested Edits queue to clearly state that they need to check for copied content and reject plagiarism. Something like 'Reject edits that fail to improve the post, make it worse, or copy from another source without attribution', replacing the text currently in the queue, would work.
- Add some (bold) text to the sidebar on the tag wiki edit page stating that it is against the rules to copy things from other places without attribution.
I hope that these things, on their own, would be enough to stop plagiarism completely. They almost certainly won't, though, so we need a penalty to go along with it. I'm focusing on the reviewers here; they're supposed to be the filter and they're not doing their job. Reviewers are the problem.
Therefore, let's set a standard that if you find a plagiarized tag wiki or excerpt, meeting the qualifications outlined above, you can flag one of the reviewers' posts detailing what you found. Upon receipt of such a flag, moderators will take action to remove those reviewers from the review queue for x days, where x is a fairly small number at first.
They should also provide a short explanation to the user (this is possible when giving a review ban) detailing exactly what they approved, why it's bad, and linking to either this post or the previous one.
I believe that this is the only way we have to stop this problem.
Thoughts?