No, it's not okay. Quoted content should be unambiguously marked as a quote.
The Help Center is unfortunately slightly overzealous in its referencing requirements. (It contains a requirement that we name the authors of content we quote, which is frequently violated. Indeed, to truly obey the rules in the Help Center you would theoretically need to dive into the MDN page's revision history and find out which individual human beings are responsible for that paragraph, then list their names in the answer... but nobody on Stack Overflow really does that.) But the bit in there about it being mandatory to mark quotes as quotes is something most of us, me included, take seriously and follow essentially without exception. It's often useful to the reader to know what's direct quotation and what's the poster's interpretation, and failure to mark content as a quote often unfairly results in poster's getting credit they don't deserve for writing it.
In this case, though, the revision history reveals that the answerer initially did explicitly state that they were quoting from MDN, but garbled the formatting a bit. Later a well-meaning editor reformatted, tweaked, and rearranged the answer in a way that both made it a slightly less faithful quotation (but without substantively changing the content) and removed the clear statement that it was a quote that was present in the original. Updates to the text on MDN have also resulted in further divergence between the answer and the MDN page (though the tweaks are minor, and the two are still clearly recognisable as being basically the same text).
There's absolutely no bad faith or wilful rule violations here, so no need for any scoldings or mod involvement. However, the end result is messy and misleading and not consistent with our referencing rules as written or as usually practiced. I think the right solution is to simply update the answer with a fresh copy and paste of the section being quoted from MDN, in a blockquote, and prefix it with something like "According to MDN" and a link. I'm going to do that now.