The blog post is very concerning from a licensing standpoint.
From a marketing perspective, which you appear to be coming from, 40.6 million copy-pastes in 2 weeks seems like a great thing.
From a legal perspective, it's quite the opposite. Everything copied from this site is licensed under one of the CC-BY-SA versions, which require attribution of the content:
You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
The blog post makes a single mention of licensing:
And of course, be aware that some code requires a certain license to use.
That is an absurd understatement of the attribution requirement of all content on this site.
Licensing is a serious issue, and the CC-BY-SA license is repeated in the site's Terms of Service. The Apache Software Foundation prohibits its projects from copying code from Stack Overflow for this very reason.
It does not surprise me that Stack Overflow is insensitive to the rights of its users conveyed by the license under which they post: it was the subject of much controversy less than two years ago. It does surprise me that no lessons were learned from that kerfuffle, and you seem to be celebrating activity that in the overwhelming majority of cases violates the license granted by users posting this content.
I hope you consider editing the blog post to make the attribution requirement more clear.
Since the blog post and related commentary indicate that Stack Overflow has the ability to monitor copy/paste activity and react differently, I strongly recommend you consider injecting an attribution onto the clipboard when content is copied, a common practice I've seen in many sites producing creative content. Failure to do so, in conjunction with the obvious "marketing" slant of your celebration of millions of (probably unattributed) copy-pastes, seems to indicate a lack of respect for the license your users provide content under.
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