2 years, 2 months (possibly 2 weeks, 2 days, 2 hours, 2 minutes and 2 seconds) ago I asked a question on Meta, when I chanced upon a user that was simply reformulating answers already provided, some time after they were posted. In the discussions following my question I remember talking with a high rep user, telling them something along these lines:
—Pick any technology I know nothing about and I bet you in less than 1 month I'll make more than 1k rep on it (on an anonymous user) using this technique alone.
—Do you know anyone doing this, did you notice it frequently?
—I don't do this kind of police work. It bothered me, enough to open two more answers from the same user, which were also copycat answers. Then I took some action, without opening the 4th. But I normally don't do this.
Apparently, nowadays, the need for SO rep got a tad higher as it's often times considered during job recruitment, so people are actively seeking ways to make rep. Not to help others, not to explain principles, not to make the web better.
They're interested in the mechanics of generating more SO rep with less effort. Copycat-ing answers is probably cost effective, and it's definitely spreading. With decent English, not much effort, perhaps a bit of humor (or at least relaxed attitude), sometimes one does a bit better than the original 1. If the copied user frowns about it, they delete the answer and mingle off. But most users don't.
Also, Stack Overflow kind of helps this practice by:
- not making it more obvious which answer was first
- not allowing users to flag answers as duplicate
I admit, I got used to it. 2 years ago I found it upsetting, even outrageous. Now it's so common I got to not care so much about it. I don't even bother downvoting them anymore. I rarely downvote them on other people's answers and I almost never downvote copies of my own answers anymore. I don't really know why, I know I should, but the end result is that I don't. I almost surprised myself finding this behavior acceptable coming from fresh users.
But, is it?
This question (from 1 year ago) focuses more on whether or not this is plagiarism. I frankly don't give a flying love what term we use. I personally call it "rep-fishing".
My question is: any ideas on decent methods to keep this in check, without affecting freedom to answer? Would you give (some?) users the possibility to decide whether or not an answer is a copycat (if it adds significant details or if it's just the same answer reworded)? If only some, to whom? Gold users on one of the question tags, any users above a rep threshold?
Note: Do note the practice is more common and can be easily observed on SO, particularily on busy tags (such as CSS or javascript) than on more specialized tags or smaller SE communities.
1: In reality, the vast majority do not put in the effort to improve the copied answers. They simply reword.