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11:00 PM
@Tom many thanks - looking at that thread, it seems there is no consensus. I'll close this Q as a dupe of the the one you linked — pinoyyid 30 secs ago
@j08691 Just look at late answers (to, say, popular questions). Any answer with complete English sentences is suspect. They are usually also quite verbose. — Peter Mortensen just now
11:41 PM
This will limit some form of automation if it were to be available in the future or if it is currently feasible in a limited scope (for example doing an internal search lookup when the url is within the stack exchange network; this would be efficient because it would not require scraping and could be done with existing hooks). While it is true that there are other sources of plagiarism, those should be addressed in a different field altogether. — Travis J 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? What should I do if a question has been asked and answered, but software (and answer) has changed? — Karl Knechtel 23 secs ago
Avoiding plagiarism is important for legal reasons. When you post content anywhere on the Stack Exchange network, it is part of the Terms of Service that you grant the company a Creative Commons license to that content. In order to do so legally, you must hold copyright on the content. If you plagiarize it from elsewhere, that "elsewhere" theoretically could sue. Ensuring that moderators actively remove such content is part of how the company establishes good faith. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
"To be honest I find this confusing" - it's extremely simple, and it's policy that, for example, any high school student should be intimately familiar with in order to avoid academic probation etc. The content of your answer is almost directly quoted from the article. Therefore, it needs to be formatted as a quote, to make it clear that the information is not your original thought. Separately, it needs to incorporate your own explanation, which is your original thought - because we don't accept link-only answers. We aren't trying to be a human-powered search engine. — Karl Knechtel 45 secs ago
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