Before I start, there is a [help article](https://stackoverflow.com/help/referencing) dedicated to the overarching issue of referencing content from external sources. The guidelines therein apply to pretty much any situation involving referencing external content.

Now, there are two major issues at play here.

### Attribution

The first major issue is in providing attribution for copied content, arguably the more important of the two. Here's what the help article says:

> When you find a useful resource that can help answer a question (from another site or in an answer on Stack Overflow) make sure you do all of the following:
>
> - Provide a [link](https://stackoverflow.com/editing-help#links) to the original page or answer
> - [Quote](https://stackoverflow.com/editing-help#simple-blockquotes) only the relevant portion
> - Provide the name of the original author

(with an example to boot)

The link to the original source serves both as acknowledgement of the source, and as a way for readers to verify the source (for as long it remains available anyway). The blockquote markup is used to indicate, typographically, the portions of the content that come from that source, and therefore **not original content**. If the name of the original author is unavailable (as is the case with this very help article, funnily enough), simply naming the source itself will do.

So, **simply tacking a "Reference" link at the bottom of a wall of unquoted text**, as is the habit of an alarming number of users, **does *not* count as proper attribution**, for the very reason you state: the user is still implicitly passing off the content as original, by not expressly indicating that it's from elsewhere. The association of the content to the user is otherwise expressed by their user card at the bottom of the post — incidentally, much more conspicuously than the "Reference" link.

**Answers that fail to follow *all* of the steps above are considered plagiarism and subject to deletion by a moderator.** As an editor, if you believe the user could benefit from an example, you may help by adding blockquotes and editing the link text to explicitly name the source, for example. But don't feel like you are obligated to do so; the responsibility of providing this attribution falls first and foremost on the user posting the answer. You should flag any cases of plagiarism you see regardless, but *especially* flag if you notice a *pattern* of this coming from specific users. [We have a mod message that's designed specifically for these users.](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/269315/changes-to-discourage-plagiarism/269319#269319)

### Copying partial content vs entire content

The second major issue is in the amount of content that's copied. Although this doesn't influence whether something is considered plagiarism, it's nevertheless important to keep in mind. Here's what the help article says:

> Do *not* copy the complete text of external 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**.

The first half of this paragraph is pretty clear: **we expect answers on Stack Overflow to be original contributions by and large**; copying entire texts wholesale is incredibly frowned upon (and can often be seen as lazy on part of the poster). For an example of how to "use [someone else's] words and ideas to support your own", look no further than *this very paragraph*. See what I'm doing? I'm quoting a paragraph from a reliable source to show you that I'm not just talking through my hat.

Granted, there are some situations where indeed there isn't much more to be said than one or two well-written paragraphs from a documentation section or a language specification. That's fine, you're not going to get into trouble for doing that every now and then. Just remember that you still need to provide attribution and quote the text as required above.

But if you find that you're consistently posting answers that consist of little more than text from other sources, or if you find yourself about to highlight and copy practically an entire document just to answer one specific question, that's when you need to take a step back and ask yourself if it really is necessary to copy all 27 of those paragraphs. Can you distill the text to just the portions that are immediately relevant to the question at hand? Can you then elaborate on this text, forming an answer that's tailored to that specific question that you can be proud to call your own?

If so, then you have yourself a winning formula for contributing well-researched *and* well-constructed answers to Stack Overflow.