If you're going to copy-paste it,

- you should also check the license of that content and whether you're allowed by that license to copy and paste it to Stack Overflow, where [all user-contributed content is licenses under CC-BY-SA 4.0](https://meta.stackexchange.com/legal/terms-of-service#licensing).

- you must follow [the rules laid out for referencing material written by others](/help/referencing).

- you would do well to say whether or not you are affiliated in any way with the author of that content, or the service serving that content (see also [/help/promotion](/help/promotion)).

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There's another option that you haven't considered: attribution (give a link and name the author where possible) + paraphrasing / adaptation of how you present the information.

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To address your thoughts on the options you thought of,

> Answer with a link? It may be a bad idea, because what if the page goes down in the future?

Yeah you have a good intuition to think that. You can archive the page if you're concerned and provide a link to the archived version. Ex. using https://web.archive.org/.

> Just add the link in the comments? Again: what if the page goes down in the future?

If material written by others is a significant contributor to the material in your post, it would be best to put the link in the post itself. See the purposes of comments in [/help/privileges/comment](/help/privileges/comment). TL;DR putting links in the comments is ok, but if you're the author of the post, you may as well. Others may add links in comments instead of editing a post they don't own because they don't know if adding it will conflict with your intent as the owner of the post (and edits should _generally_ not conflict with the post-owner's intent).

> Copy/paste the article and give credit with the link? If the page goes down people will still be able to see its content. But it can be seen as promoting a site while it is not.

I think I've addressed this in what I've said above.