I find your lack of attribution disturbing.1
What you've suggested for attribution does not fulfill the attribution requirements imposed by CC BY-SA 3.0, under which Stack Exchange has licensed the contributions from users. Just linking to a data dump and saying "go find the attribution for this somewhere over there" isn't sufficient. Even if the "attribution" was a link which went directly to a page which contained the content, it would be insufficient.2 In my opinion, having the only attribution being a link to an archive, where you're telling people to go dig through a non-human-readable set of data files3 to find the author information, is significantly worse. You're basically saying that Stack Exchange considers it acceptable to skip including the attribution required by CC BY-SA 3.0 when it's just inconvenient to include the attribution.
For attribution, CC BY-SA 3.0 requires that you list:4
- The copyright notice for the work CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(c)
- At least a link to the license URI5, CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(a)
- The original author(s)' username(s) CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(c)(i)
- The title of the work CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(c)(ii)
- A URI to the work6, CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(c)(iii) and
- Clearly indicate any changes you've made. CC BY-SA 3.0 § 3(b) and § 4(c)(iv)
The only time these are not required is if the author has given notice, under CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(a), that they desire for their credit to be removed. In such case, you must remove the attribution.
Stack Exchange does not have the right to change this retroactively
CC BY-SA 3.0 is the license under which the authors licensed their contributions to Stack Exchange. Stack Exchange is just a licensee of that content. It doesn't hold the copyright to the user content. It doesn't own the user content. It's not the author. Stack Exchange does not have the right to change the terms of the license retroactively.
While what you have suggested is convenient for Stack Exchange, changing a legal agreement retroactively is not acceptable.7 Stack Exchange could have made your suggested attribution what's acceptable by making the change public prior to the users providing their contributions, but not after the content has been contributed.
The (non) attribution you have suggested might be considered sufficient if all of Stack Exchange was considered a single work. But that's not the view intended by the terms of service, the CC BY-SA 3.0 license, or how Stack Exchange has treated each individual contribution. Given that the Documentation dump is hosted by archive.org, not Stack Exchange, it makes it clear that Stack Exchange is not treating them as all the same work. Thus, such interpretation would be internally inconsistent. So far, and certainly how Documentation was set up, and Stack Exchange in general, each Documentation example, SE question, and SE answer is considered a separate work. Each is individually attributable to the users who have contributed to that individual work.
Your suggestion to not list contributors conflicts with the data dump
The data dump license.txt file explicitly states (emphasis mine):
So let us clarify what we mean by attribution. If you republish this content, we require that you:
- Visually indicate that the content is from Stack Overflow Documentation. It doesn’t have to be obnoxious; a discreet text blurb is fine.
- Hyperlink directly to the Stack Overflow Documentation archive located at archive.org.
- Indicate topic and example IDs where the content came from.
- List the contributors (found in contributors.json) with a link to their profile page (e.g. https://stackoverflow.com/users/12345/username).
Note: As written, the above 4 points from the license.txt file can only be interpreted as in addition to the requirements spelled out in the CC BY SA 3.0 license. If they were intended to limit those requirements, then A) it would need to explicitly state that it's reducing/limiting what's required; and B) Any such limits would have had to be publicly posted prior to the users contributing content. When interpreted as additional requirements, these do not conflict with CC BY-SA 3.0.
This isn't a situation where we get to just say I'd like it to be this way.
The contributions have already been made. The license which defines the rights and duties of the parties to the license has already been agreed to. We only get to deal with the situation as it exists, not how we might like it to exist. The only way we would be able to do that is if we got each separate author to agree to new license terms for their work.
Suggested attribution
Attributing Documentation is complex. I would suggest something like the following text. This is for the example "Getting started with firefox-addon - Installing unsigned add-ons":
The following content is from "Getting started with firefox-addon - Installing unsigned add-ons" from Stack Overflow Documentation (archived here); copyright 2017 by Makyen and Martin Zhai; licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0. An archive of the full Stack Overflow Documentation content can be found at archive.org, in which this example is indexed by its topic ID: 3235, as example: 27244.
Normally, I would strongly recommend including the URL at which the person which is copying the content actually obtained it. In fact, stating where you found it is considered a primary criteria for referencing material in most professions.
However, given that the goal here is to remove links to Documentation, I chose to use a link to an archive.org copy of that Documentation page. I had archive.org create an archive of the Documentation page by going to the Documentation page and clicking on the following bookmarklet:
javascript:void(window.open('https://web.archive.org/save/'+location.href))
I am not a lawyer. The above is based on a basic reading of the CC BY-SA 3.0 license. It should be considered my opinion, and is not legal advice.
1. The way this statement is phrased is intended to provide some humor into a serious subject. (reference)
2. Along the same lines, just links back to questions/answers from which content was copied from Stack Exchange is insufficient for attribution. Such attribution must include the 6 things listed above. Proper attribution for code from an answer would be something like:
The following code is from the answer to "If I use SO code on my website, how should I give attribution? - Meta Stack Overflow" at https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/253622, copyright 2014 and 2017 by Bill the Lizard and Makyen, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).
3. The format is a 7-zip compressed set of JSON encoded data. A human could read through the data. However, the significant majority of people would find it difficult to find the authors of a particular post. Admittedly, a higher percentage of Stack Overflow readers would be fine reading through it than the general population.
4. CC BY-SA 3.0 qualifies #3–6 [CC BY-SA 3.0 § 4(c)(i)–(iv)] as only required when "reasonable to the medium or means You are utilizing". However, I don't see that Stack Exchange would want to argue that its unreasonable to include them in an SE question/answer. If Stack Exchange makes that argument here, then it opens up that argument to anyone, anywhere, which isn't consistent with how Stack Exchange has been a proponent of attribution in the past. Basically, IMO, it's reasonable to include those in an SE Q/A if it's reasonable to include them anywhere.
5. The CC BY-SA 3.0 license is already linked from every Stack Exchange page, so this requirement is covered.
6. You don't have to provide the URI to the work if "such URI does not refer to the copyright notice or licensing information for the Work". The data dump does include it, so you do need to include the URI to the data dump, if that's the source of where you obtained the information.
7. You could write an agreement, and there are ones so written, that allows one party to unilaterally change the agreement. However, what's really required for that to be enforceable is beyond both my expertise and what could be covered here.