As the article is quite small, I'm going to quote the entire article, and add numbering to specific wording:
How to reference material written by others
Plagiarism - posting the work of others with no indication that it is not your own1 - is frowned on by our community, and may result in your answer being down-voted or deleted.
When you find a useful resource that can help answer a question (from another site or in an answer2 on Stack Overflow) make sure you do all of the following:
- Provide a link to the original page or answer
- Quote only the relevant portion
- Provide the name of the original author
Example:
According to Ernest Hemingway - Biographical on Nobelprize.org, Hemingway saw combat when he was a teenager. It says:
After the United States entered the First World War, he joined a volunteer ambulance unit in the Italian army. Serving at the front, he was wounded, was decorated by the Italian Government, and spent considerable time in hospitals ....
[other sources, quotes, explanations, etc. necessary to complete the answer]
Do not copy the complete text of external3 sources; instead, use their words and ideas to support your own. And always give proper credit to the author and site where you found the text, including a direct link to it.
Firstly we have the opening statement (point 1), that denotes that this is in regards to any work that isn't your own. That is very clear. It'll include off site resources, as well as anything that is on any of the sites within the Stack Overflow Community that you, personally, do not own.
Next we have point 2, where it states the word "answer", which is a specific keyword within Stack Overflow. This could be open to interpretation that for things like comments, you don't need to do what the article says. If the section in parenthesis said "for example from another site or in an answer" then the sentence couldn't be read as exhaustive. This is my interpretation here.
Finally we have the point 3, where it uses the word "external". This is somewhat confusing in my opinion here; what counts as "external"? Is it anything that isn't within the post (Question, comments and answers on the same page)? Anything not on Stack Overflow? Anything not within the Stack Overflow Communities?
To me, this feels like a misnomer, and that external is the incorrect word to use if the intent includes content within Stack Overflow (Communities) as such content could be interpreted as "internal". Example comment from cigien, who stated their opinion on copying comments was:
[Do not copy the complete text of external sources; instead, use their words and ideas to support your own] doesn't apply here since it's not an external source.
It seems that there could be multiple interpretations here, and that different degrees of the article should be applied depending on original content: If it's an answer and if it's "external".
This is further muddied by the moderator flag response that was given for a declined flag on an answer that was an uncited, unquoted copy of a comment on the same question:
comments are fair game
This very much suggests that the moderator in question is on the side of comments not being included within the boundaries of the help centre's article, which I completely agree is a possible interpretation, though I disagree with that interpretation.
So what is the true intention here? If content on Stack Overflow itself, or content that is "internal" (to the question?) has different guidelines I feel that the article should be more specific. All the content on Stack Overflow is licenced under CC BY-SA and that includes comments. The fact that a comment could be deleted at any point, in my opinion, means that citation is very important, as the original source can be easily lost. That should apply regardless of if the comment is on the same question, or not.
It would be great to hear what the community's interpretation is here as well; I feel that for something like this, it's very important that we all work from the same page.