(I have read the tag wiki for copycat-sites. However, this site does include attribution, but does so in a misleading way that is faking direct affiliation with myself.)
A website masquerading as a "tech blog", but whose content is entirely ripped from other sites, has stolen a particularly dumb SO question of mine and pasted it word-for-word as a blog post on their site. My full name is listed as the Author.
Although I don't really mind my question being shared, it's being shared in a context where it is clearly meant to look like I'm a personal, affiliated contributor to that website's blog. There is attribution in the form of a single stackoverflow link, but this is tucked away at the bottom in a way that feels deliberately designed to make sure you don't notice it. My full name, however, is put in big block letters beneath the "article", where it tells users they can "Read more posts by this author."
(Ironically, the site has also stolen an article on how to avoid getting your articles stolen!)
Is content on SO licensed in such a way that this is legally acceptable, i.e. does the principle that code provided in answers is acceptable for personal project (re)use also extend to the text content of questions and answers? Or would I be fine to seek some recourse (i.e. a takedown notice) over this?
Edit:
The article in question also fails to link to my author page, hence failing the Attribution requirement. I will put in a notice and may also inform cloudflare of the site's persistent copyright infringement of thousands of articles.
Looking at this situation, however, in the future it may be valuable to also require that sites don't overstate attribution by faking affiliation, as well.