Only flag posts for copying content when they do so in violation of our referencing/attribution policy. That basically just requires that the contributor undertook a good-faith effort to give credit to the original author, under a (very large) umbrella doctrine of "fair use".
It is very easy to properly reference material contributed to Stack Exchange sites, but it is sometimes more difficult to gather all the expected information when linking to a blog post or other off-site resource. For example, the referencing policy requires that one "provide the name of the original author". That becomes difficult if the author's name—or even an Internet "handle"—cannot be found anywhere on the page. However, that does not mean that the content cannot be posted here without violating our referencing policy. You just need to gather all of the information that you can reasonably find, keeping within the spirit of the policy.
As alluded to in the flag decline message, the primary concern that moderators police in regard to "copied content" flags is plagiarism, which is attempting to take credit for others' work. It is not our intention, and not within our purview, to enforce legal or licensing matters. We're not lawyers, and it's not within our interest (or that of the network at large) to attempt to do so.
Relevant to this is the network-wide Acceptable Use Policy, specifically the section on "Copyright":
Copyright. Using copyrighted material does not constitute infringement in all cases. In general, however, users should be careful when using copyrighted content without the permission of those who created it. It is our policy to respond to notices of alleged infringement sent to [email protected] that comply with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act ("DMCA").
The above-quoted text tells you how claims of copyright infringement are to be handled—by filing a formal DMCA claim. Moderators do not process these claims, as we cannot distinguish between genuine and fake copyright claims, nor can we arbitrate whether or not the user actually has the right to use the material (e.g., maybe they emailed the author of the blog and received permission). These issues are all addressed during the DMCA process by those qualified to do so.
And it's not just moderators who won't act upon informal claims of copyright. The company cannot act on copyright claims that lack a proper DMCA request without jeopardizing their "safe harbor" protections.
Of course, the guidance in the Help Center and elsewhere that we prefer answers on Stack Overflow to be original contributions still holds. However, it's just guidance, not a requirement. The penalty for failing to contribute original content is not deletion, unless that content has no value whatsoever to the community. But the only thing worse from my perspective than unoriginal content (remixed or otherwise) is unoriginal content without attribution.
Several people are finding new sources of language to quote back to me that say something of the form, "we prefer that your contributions be original". Yes, we do. That's accurate. It is not, however, evidence of a policy that contradicts anything in this answer. As I noted in a comment on the question:
As with our homework policy, this is another case of confusing guidance/recommendations offered on Meta sites with prohibitions/policy. We strongly recommend that users explain things in their own words and submit original content. However, we do not enforce that with deletion or other sanctions.
I also keep seeing the word "plagiarism" mentioned in comments and in proposed "related questions". Those are all irrelevant to this discussion. The situation that Ryan M brought up, motivating this question, was not a case of plagiarism. Plagiarism involves taking credit (or attempting to take credit) for the work of someone else. With attribution incorporated, it's not plagiarism. So this is an entirely separate case. Moderators do enforce and sanction violations involving plagiarism; we do not enforce off-site licensing agreements.