Just now I stumbled upon an answer that had a highly upvoted comment accusing it of plagiarism (from another answer on a different question), from many years ago. I checked out the claim and it was clearly plagiarism to me, so I decided to take my first stab at using the new system for flagging plagiarized comment.
As one might guess from the fact that an applicable answer (or at least code block) could be copied across, the other question was pretty closely related. However, I had already assessed (as part of my general curation work) that it was not a duplicate, and felt (for some reason) like it would be useful to say so in the flag message (I was, after all, asked to be specific.)
This resulted in an error message telling me not to use the plagiarized-content flag for duplicates, which doesn't make a lot of sense to me for answers. (The answers that I've been flagging as duplicates are generally considerably rephrased and likely to have been written from scratch, anyway.) I removed that text from my explanation and submitted the report successfully, so I am pretty confident that the system specifically objects to the word duplicate
.
I can certainly see the use-case for such a filter so I do not want to call it a bug; but personally I'd like to think I don't need to be bothered in such a manner. Shouldn't it be enough to just put a textual warning in the form itself, on the "Plagiarized content" radio button?
dupl1cate
instead. Pr0blam solved.Duplіcate
which is not the same asDuplicate
.і
see what you did there :D