last day (6 days later) » 

16:25
-8
Q: My post was deleted for plagiarising my own paper

polcottIs solving the halting problem easier than people think? I didn't refer to my paper because this causes 100 point penalty for SPAM: https://philpapers.org/archive/OLCHPP-2.pdf There must be something better than damned if you do and damned if you don't. Will removing link to author's own research...

BDL
BDL
1) How should people know that you are the author of the paper? 2) Even if you are the author, you still have to reference the paper in your answer.
@BDL I tried that and got 100 point penalty for spam.
BDL
BDL
Can you point to the answer where you tried that? I can see three deleted answers from you on that question, but I couldn't spot a reference to that paper, much less a notice that you are the author of the paper. And why are there even three answers from you on a single question? Without knowing the exact thought process of the moderator, I can easily see that the spam penalty was handed out for posting three times the same links to the example project.
@BDL softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/430016 This was specifically deleted only because of my reference to my paper.
How about writing an original answer tailored to the question? Because this does seem to be 100% intended just to promote your paper, whether you cite the source or not.
16:25
I don't see any evidence of you receiving the -100 rep penalty for spam. Are you using a second account?
@SamuelLiew The 100 point penalty was on software engineering.
BDL
BDL
@MisterMiyagi: I can't say anything about the post on SoftwareEngineering because I don't know their moderation policies and I can't see deleted posts on that site.
@MisterMiyagi Some forums consider citing your own paper as spam. This is not at all what the word "spam" means.
@SamuelLiew Can you restore my post that was deleted for plagiarizing my own paper?
Yeah, but already on the Thread you linked to, you've already posted 3x times the same Link, that already feels "spammy", I would say..., you don't need to re-post again and again the same Link as a Comment to the Question + several Answers...
@chivracq softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9424/… Would such edits make it not spam? Yes. Thomas Owens Mod
16:25
I don't know what the rules at softwareengineering are, but here we expect answers to be tailored to the question, not copied from another source even when the source is yours. It's perfectly fine (if not required) to link to the source, but the former still needs to be followed.
@KevinB "Is solving the halting problem easier than people think?" Showing an error in the conventional proofs that invalidates these proofs is a correct answer to most questions about the halting problem.
unfortunately, that doesn't really mean anything to me, being someone outside of that subject matter.
@KevinB I broke the problem down so that any software engineer of ordinary competence can see that I did refute the halting problem proofs. researchgate.net/publication/…
@KevinB Here is the same paper that I was accused of plagiarizing, it has my name on it philpapers.org/rec/OLCHPP-2
Is there a problem with just leaving your comment as it is and not writing an answer? since you don't seem to want to provide one that isn't more or less just copying content from your other publications?
@KevinB Yes there is a big problem with leaving my answer deleted for plagiarizing my own work. This is unacceptable.
16:25
Different Sites (on Internet and within the SE-Network), different Rules... But you seem to be only interested in posting Links to your Paper without any further "Explanation"... If you don't want to "tailor" your Comment(s)/Answer (singular, not plural...!), then the Content of your Paper can already be found on Internet, ... and the SE-Network is not the right place for you to want to just link to it...
I mean... ¯_(ツ)_/¯ if you continue not following the rules of the sites you're posting to (each one has its own set) the same end-result is going to occur.
When you quote your own paper, you must explicitly mention that you are the author. You didn't do that in stackoverflow.com/a/73829749
@chivracq An ordinary software engineer can see that a simulating halt decider defeats the "do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides" basis of all of the conventional halting problem proofs. It defeats these proofs because the program-under-test can never reach the return value from the alt decider. If people fully understood this tiny little thing that would know that the halting problem proofs have been refuted.
@PM2Ring That does not work: Will removing link to author's own research paper be enough to make this question not spam? "Would such edits make it not spam? Yes." Thomas Owen Mod softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9424/…
The general info re plagiarism that applies across the network is here: stackoverflow.com/help/referencing That article (& its links) focuses on material written by others, but it also applies when you quote (&/or link) your own work. Bear in mind that we can't necessarily be certain of your identity, and the community tends to err on the side of caution when possible plagiarism arises.
This SO meta site isn't the proper place to discuss policy of other sites on the network. However, the policy regarding plagiarism should be fairly uniform across the network. Meta Stack Exchange is the place to discuss & dispute issues that affect multiple sites.
@PM2Ring If Stack Exchange has such inconsistent policy on this where referencing my own work gets a 100 point penalty and not referencing my own work gets my answer deleted for plagiarism how can I a reasonable person comply?
16:25
However, there's also the issue of excessive self-promotion. stackoverflow.com/help/promotion applies across the network, but the community & moderators of each site decide on what they consider to be excessive or inappropriate self-promotion.
IMHO the core policies, including the specifics about spam and self-promoting, are consistent across all sites, but there might big differences on how these core policies are understood and enforced by each community. If you are really interested on contributing to several communities, please be open to learn the ropes of each of them.
@PM2Ring It only takes an person of ordinary competence in software engineering to see that the halting problem proofs are defeated by a simulating halt decider. They are defeated on the basis that the program-under-test cannot possibly "do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides" because the return value from the halt decider is unreachable by the program under test. No one reads what I wrote and instead votes its down.
If you reference your own work, and explicitly mention that you're the author, then you should be ok. That is, unless the community decides that your post isn't really aimed at answering the question, but instead primarily exists to promote your linked material. I'm not saying that you're actually doing that, and I haven't looked closely at your posts. However, I expect that many readers will tend to view your claims with extreme suspicion, since the Halting Theorem is such a fundamental result in computer science.
@PM2Ring "If you reference your own work, and explicitly mention that you're the author, then you should be ok." No I am not OK: Will removing link to author's own research paper be enough to make this question not spam? softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9424/…
@PM2Ring I summed up (to you above) in a single paragraph exactly how I defeated the halting problem proofs. If the program-under-test cannot possibly reach the return value from the halt decider then the conventional proofs are defeated.
does, explaining to us how you solved a given problem or thing, validate not following guidelines?
16:25
@KevinB I proved that these guidelines are contradictory. I must and must not cite my own paper.
Why are you promoting your papers/findings/"proof" here on meta as well now? This really isn't a good way to show you are not intending to spam.
you have? where?
@KevinB I must and must not cite my own paper.
Citing your paper doesn't provide immunity from people finding your post spammy/not useful and downvoting it. Not citing it will result in deletion. Where's the contradiction?
Sorry, meta isn't the place to discuss whether your claims regarding Turing's Halting Theorem are correct. And that's not really relevant to the discussions about plagiarism and excessive self-promotion. FWIW, I'm happy to cast an undelete vote on your answer if you edit it to explicitly mention that you're the author of the linked PDF.
16:25
@PM2Ring A moderator should undelete it on that basis. If I add my citation then I will get a 100 point deduction and have the post remain deleted.
The question is now closed as require Details / unclear, but following the discussion, it's clear to me that : This question does not appear to seek input and discussion from the community. If you have encountered a problem on one of our sites, please describe it in detail. See also: What is "meta"? How does it work?
I feel like you are really confusing the issue by 1) bringing up the rules/moderation of a different site and 2) not making it clear where you were accused of spam and where you were accused of plagarism.
@Rubén my post was deleted for plagiarism, I established here that it is not plagiarism, the post shlould be undeleted.
I'm all for it being undeleted as not plagiarism.... but equally it should be redeleted for not being useful, so there's no real point in undeleting it at all.
@BSMP When SE deletes posts the fail to cite the poster's own work and deducts a 100 point penalty for posts the do cite the poster's own work no reasonable person can comply.
16:25
Also, anyone under 10K rep can't actually see your answer. Have you edited it to cite the source properly? Also, a few comments have pointed out it can't be a link only answer. Has that been fixed yet? If you include the text of your answer here, maybe someone can help you fix it.
@NickstandswithUkraine I proved that it is useful, yet had my proof that it is useful removed see prior edit to this question. I stand with Ukraine too. I am very happy that they are doing so well.
Ah. I just noticed that you've posted the same stuff 3 times there. That's not a good way to endear yourself to the diamond mods and other curators. It's much better to try to improve a closed / deleted post. Reposting essentially the same thing looks very spammy.
Your content might be useful in some way, but I mean useful in the context of the question, it seems more like a rambling spiel when given the context of the question. Answers should really be bespoke/specific to the question. If you'd done that, then there wouldn't've been a case for plagiarism either, because you would've had to write a bunch of specific information that made it answer the question, rather than what appears to be copy and paste a bunch of pre-written content.
@BSMP When I refer to the text of the answer so that it can be fixed this text is deleted.
You can't impose your will to the community. So far the content in the question body doesn't help your case. Focus your post on SO, explain why it's not plagiarism and explain why the referred post answer the question. Even if you "won" the plagiarism part if the post doesn't look to be a fair attempt to answer the question it might not be undeleted.
16:25
@Rubén The mod that deleted my question for plagiarism agrees that it is not plagiarism, yet says that the answer is not useful. When I prove that the answer is useful this material is deleted from my question above.
Do you mean the text under the === in this revision? It would help if you added a header stating, "This is the text of my answer on the question on main". It's not clear that's what it is otherwise.
@BSMP That is alternate text of the original answer. This text applied to my work that directly refutes a key publication.
Furthermore, if that was your answer then it would probably still be deleted as a link-only answer. Your post needs to still answer the question if the links break.
While links to external content might be helpful, posts here should be self-contained, so you should add the most relevant parts directly into the post.
@Rubén I would be very happy to change my answer any way that is deemed appropriate, so far no such way exists. Current guidelines require me to cite my paper and forbid me from citing my paper.
@Rubén Current guidelines (see comments in this post) require me to show that my answer is useful and forbid me from showing how my answer is useful.
16:25
Current guidelines require you to cite your paper, not copy your paper and paste it into an answer. They are not the same thing. "any software engineer of ordinary competence can see that"
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@NickstandswithUkraine We don't delete technically wrong answers, we downvote them. We do delete answers that are of very low quality, or new answers to popular old questions that simply repeat previous answers without bringing in anything new or useful. However, this is a bit of a weird question: it's not really on-topic for SO, and it only exists because it's so old, and was written before the Computer Science sites existed.
@PM2Ring I'm aware, I should've made it clearer that was my opinion on what I'd want, rather than what should actually happen.
@NickstandswithUkraine An ordinary software engineer can see that a simulating halt decider defeats the "do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides" basis of all of the conventional halting problem proofs. It defeats these proofs because the program-under-test can never reach the return value from the halt decider. If people fully understood this tiny little thing that would know that the halting problem proofs have been refuted.
@NickstandswithUkraine I updated my question to show how I was penalized 100 points for citing my own paper.
You are not forbidden from citing your own paper. No one here on Stack Overflow has told you that.
@BSMP I proved that I was penalized 100 points just for citing my own paper. SE has contradictory policies that no reasonable person can comply with.
16:28
@polcott On Stack Overflow or Software Engineering?
@BSMP SE has contradictory policies that no reasonable person can comply with. They should not be directly contradictory across sites.
This is Stack Overflow. No one on Stack Overflow has said you can't cite your paper.

If you want your answer undeleted you have to cite your sources and edit it so it answers the question even if the links fail.
@BSMP I would be happy to make any changes approved by a moderator. If I make changes that are suggested here by non-moderators I could be penalized for a different reason.
Reading the answer from the mod over at Software Engineering, it seems like you misunderstood what the issue is.
Thomas Owens said the problem was that your post didn't appear to be a good faith, on-topic question and therefore appeared to just be an excuse to link to your paper. You weren't penalized just for citing the source but for creating a post for the sole purpose of linking to your paper.
@BSMP "Is solving the halting problem easier than people think?" is directly answered by showing all of the details of how the original proofs are refuted. I can't easily provide hundreds of pages of source-code directly in my answer. When I tried to concisely explain my answer it was always rejected-out-of-hand without review.
@BSMP I only want people to understand one single point: That a simulating halt decider defeats the conventional halting problem proofs because it makes the return value from the halt decider unreachable by the program-under-test. This make it impossible for this program-under-test to "do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides." thus defeating all of the conventional proofs.
16:40
@polcott If you can't answer the question with anything more than links then your answer just isn't a good fit for the network.
@polcott That's not relevant to the discussion on whether your answer should be undeleted. It wasn't removed because someone thought it was wrong.
I just had a closer look at the question stackoverflow.com/q/40716 and the answers there. Your answers are certainly about the Halting Problem, but they don't actually attempt to answer the question(s) posed by the OP. Instead, you go off on a tangent, claiming that the Halting Problem isn't really a problem. Now it is valid to respond to a question with a frame challenge, but it's risky, especially when your claims go against the accepted wisdom.
6
@BSMP I can and have answered the question in full in my answers. These are always rejected-out-of-hand without review. By posting a link to fully operational source-code I cannot be merely dismissed as a crank.
[An impossible program C. STRACHEY 1965](https://academic.oup.com/comjnl/article/7/4/313/354243)

The Computer Journal, Volume 7, Issue 4, January 1965, Page 313, https://doi.org/10.1093/comjnl/7.4.313
Published: 01 January 1965

Halt7_Strachey.c contains fully operational Strachey T and P such that T correctly determines the halt status of P.

[Complete halt deciding system (Visual Studio Project)](https://liarparadox.org/2022_09_07.zip)
:55330391 A series of links is not considered an answer on Stack Exchange sites. Please see meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/265552/…
Also, constantly posting these links even when they aren't relevant is not helping your "this isn't spam" case.
No one here has called you a "crank" and whether or not you're right is not the issue here.
@BSMP I know that and most of my answers do not require links. When I answer without a link to fully operational source-code the answer is rejected-out-of-hand under the false assumption that I must be a crank. When I link fully operational source-code this proves that I am not a crank.
@BSMP The links prove that my answer is useful, @NickstandswithUkraine claimed that the answer was not useful and justified that my post should remain deleted on that basis. He was the one that deleted it in the first place.
I expect that the best sites on the network to discuss this are either Computer Science or Theoretical Computer Science. However, I'm certainly not an expert on the culture on those sites. But I suggest that it could be more effective if you post your material in the form of a question, rather than as an answer.
Eg, "To my understanding the Halting Problem says <this>. But it appears to me that the standard proofs do not apply to a Simulating Halt Decider, which works as follows. Is my reasoning valid?"
@polcott No, Nick doesn't have deletion powers. Your latest version was deleted by Zoe, who's a diamond moderator.
16:52
@PM2Ring I tried that and every time the question was voted down without review on the basis that I must be a crank.
@polcott They probably said it wasn't useful because it's just a list of links which isn't considered a real answer here.
@BSMP No that is not the case. Most of my posts never contained any links except to Wikipedia definitions of terms. I recently added a link in my new posts to fully operational code to prove that I am not a crank.
@polcott That's unfortunate. They should at least tell you where they think your reasoning is incorrect. But I guess they aren't obliged to do that.
@PM2Ring It has been this same thing everywhere I go. I have had thousands of reviews of this work in the last 12 months and no one correctly found a single error.
@polcott We aren't talking about "most of your posts", we're talking about the answer you provided in the meta question in this revision. That answer is just links.
17:00
@BSMP I would be happy to change the post, yet if I remove the link to my fully operational software it will be rejected-out-of-hand without review and voted down to oblivion under the assumption that I must be a crank. Will a link to GITHUB be treated the same way?
The Halting Theorem is a direct corollary of Gödel's First Incompleteness Theorem. Many people were shocked and upset by Gödel's results, and many have tried to find flaws in his theorems since they were first published, to no avail. So I don't like your chances. ;)
2
What would your answer to that question look like without the links?
You've said you can answer the question without it so now I'm curious what that would look like.
@PM2Ring I know that. The Tarski Undefinability Theorem "proves" that there can be no coherent definition of truth on the basis of not being able to prove that the liar paradox is true. Without a coherent definition of truth, "truth conditional semantics" fails. Without TCS AI can never make sufficient progress.
By definition, a valid Halting Oracle must halt for every input you give it. If a purported Halting Oracle gets stuck in a loop, whether it's a simple while loop, or a bottomless recursion, then it's not a valid Halting Oracle.
@BSMP There is not enough room to post it here.
@PM2Ring I know all that. I have been working on this stuff full time for four years. I finally have fully operational code that totally proves my point.
17:15
And I learned about Gödel & Turing 40+ years ago. Colour me sceptical. ;)
@PM2Ring I have proved that all of the conventional halting problem proofs that require the program-under-test to do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides are defeated by a simulating halt decider. They are defeated on the basis that the return value from the halt decider is unreachable by the program-under-test. All that I have ever been looking for is validation of this one single point. That really should not be too much to ask.
If the Halting Oracle halts, the program-under-test can access its return value. If that return value isn't accessible in a finite number of steps, the Halting Oracle is broken. End of story.
@PM2Ring It might seem that way by making sure to ignore what I said, otherwise it is dead obvious that the program-under-test cannot possibly access the value of its simulating halt decider.
American mathematician, computer scientist, science fiction author, Rudy Rucker has written extensively on the Halting Problem. FWIW, his PhD thesis was on transfinite set theory, so he knows what he's talking about. He explored many ways to try & defeat the Halting Problem. You may enjoy reading his stuff.
@polcott Then why was the version of your answer in the meta question so short? If you have content for an answer other than the links, why not just include that?
17:30
@PM2Ring I have his book for 20 years and read it. I think that I even contacted his dad with a message for him. None-the-less even a casual review of my rebuttal of the halting problem proofs (provided above) validates this rebuttal.
@BSMP Even this short answer was deleted because it did not directly pertain to the plagiarism issue.
17:43
@polcott Why didn't you include the other content you had for the answer in your post on the main site?
@BSMP Because it was always rejected-out-of-hand without review. The linked source-code conclusively proves that I am correct.
@polcott No, I mean why not have both things in the same answer post: the actual answer plus the links supporting it.
@BSMP People never get to the links supporting it, having already rejected what I said out-of-hand-without-review on the basis that I must be a crank. If they only see the fully operational source-code that proves that I am correct then they cannot reject what I said out-of-hand.
17:58
But they can flag it as Not An Answer.

If you can't/won't post a version of your answer that conforms with the site rules, then it just isn't a good fit for the network.
@BSMP I just need one single person that understands what I am saying well enough so that I know that my words are clear enough. The problem is that even when my words are perfectly clear people vote what I said down to oblivion without even reading these words.
@polcott There's nothing anyone can do to help you if you can't post a version of your answer that conforms with the site rules.
@BSMP I have posted many versions that conform to the site rules and they were all voted down to oblivion without review under the assumption that I must be a crank.
 
2 hours later…
19:40
@polcott - Are you saying you have submitted multiple versions of the same answer, if you are doing that, I am not shocked version(s) other than the original submission are being deleted. Futhermore, I see no answer(s) you have submitted, that have been downvoted. Are these answer(s) also being deleted by yourself and/or the community?
I spent one minute, and immediately recognized text from Wikipedia, you neither quoted or cited in your last question on SO.
20:26
i assume the posts that were downvoted were on one of the several other stack exchanges that this paper is being spammed posted to
20:38
@SecurityHound I don't know what SO is so I can't check that. I generally always post a link to every external source, maybe you didn't notice that I did this?
SO is stackoverflow, the site that the meta that spawned this chat is for
@KevinB Then Security Hound must be incorrect when they said that I failed to cite a Wikipedia source.
21:04
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
i don't have any sympathy for sharing one's own work across multiple sites running into roadblocks
I am not incorrect. SO is Stack Overflow
of their 3 deleted answers on this specific so question, 2 do have a link to wikipedia
-3
Q: Can a function called in infinite recursion still be a pure function?

polcottThis is the actual question: Can a function called in infinite recursion still be a pure function when the call from main() is not infinitely recursive and the call from P is aborted before it is made? In the following code H simulates its input and aborts its simulation of P before P calls H(P,P...

It contains unquoted text from Wikipedia, was mistaken, when i assumed it wasn’t cited.
Could have easily been quoted to make that clear. Other users quoted the exact same text 6 years ago.
I have little patience or sympathy for anyone who chooses to not quote and cite external resources even when they are the original author, mainly because, we cannot verify who you are nor should we have to do that.
@polcott - I won’t receive or respond to any pings from you
21:56
@KevinB I have proved that all of the conventional halting problem proofs that require the program-under-test to do the opposite of whatever the halt decider decides are defeated by a simulating halt decider. They are defeated on the basis that the return value from the halt decider is unreachable by the program-under-test. All that I have ever been looking for is validation of this one single point. That really should not be too much to ask.
i mean, that's just a bunch of technobabble to me
i'm just a dumb programmer with no training
22:16
@KevinB If you understand that a function called in infinite recursion never returns to its caller then you understand the key essence of my proof.
None of that helps explain why your post, that plagiarizes another docuemnt that happens to be yours, shouldn't be properly cited
put another way, what your proof is or does isn't relevant to why your post keeps getting deleted.
22:30
@polcott We do not care what your paper says. We care about you properly citing it. Which means writing, in the answer itself, a link to the paper itself and something that explicitly says that it is your own work.
and properly citing anything else that is taken from elsewhere and incorporated into the answer.
22:53
@KarlKnechtel I was recently penalized 100 points for citing my own paper. The person that accused me of plagiarism should have bothered to check that the author of this paper is p olcott.
No, you should have bothered to make this assertion. It is not our responsibility to associate your Stack Overflow username with a name on a paper elsewhere on the Internet. (We have no real means to verify your identity, after all.). We have a policy, and you do not get to dictate it.
Further, you have misrepresented the situation, and seem to continue to refuse to listen to or acknowledge clarifications.
@KarlKnechtel I was penalized 100 points for citing my own paper.
No, you were not.
Your **question was deleted** for plagiarism, because you did not cite it.

You were penalized for spam, separately, for linking it, **on a different Stack Exchange site**. It was **explained to you** what you needed to do in order not to fall afoul of the spam policy.
You are not the one who gets to decide what is or isn't considered spam on softwareengineering.stackexchange.com.
I cannot see the details of how you went about linking it on the other site, because I do not have 10k reputation there and it is deleted.
That said, the meta post there clearly explains the problem: do not use Stack Exchange sites in order to promote your paper.
23:16
@KarlKnechtel If a don't cite my paper I am penalized for plagiarism. If I do cite my paper I am penalized for spam. So SE policy makes me damned if I do and damned if I don't cite my paper. softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9424/… was referring to my post and concluded that citing my paper was the only reason that my post was considered spam.
>If I do cite my paper I am penalized for spam
If you cite your paper with proper attribution and disclosure, it is not spam on Stack Overflow. It may or may not be spam on softwareengineering.stackexchange.com. We don't set their rules, and vice-versa.
However, it is still bad faith to "ask a question" for the purpose of promoting your paper. That does not belong anywhere on the Stack Exchange network.
We are not sympathetic to "I am damned if I do and damned if I don't, while trying to promote my paper", because we do not want you to promote your paper here.
@KarlKnechtel It is terribly poor management that two SE sites treat citing my paper and not citing my paper BOTH as violations.
Stack Overflow is for contributing to a library. It is not a publication outlet for your own content.
No, it isn't. You don't get to put your paper on the network just because you want to.
@KarlKnechtel I really did refute the halting problem proofs. This is very easy to see by anyone paying even a little attention.
We must care about these issues, because publishing content on the Stack Exchange network inherently and irrevocably grants a Creative Commons license for the content.
We do not care whether you refuted them or not. That has no bearing on whether you are allowed to post the content here.
23:24
@KarlKnechtel As I posted on another meta post SE is in violation of this because this license requires attribution of authorship and a copyright notice on every post. softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9428/…
You are simply incorrect about the violation of the license. The attribution of authorship is present on every post; it is the user card. The copyright notice is present on each page: it is at the bottom, reading something like "Site design / logo © 2022 Stack Exchange Inc; user contributions licensed under CC BY-SA. rev 2022.10.5.37263".
Whether or not se is violating their own license is irrelevant anyway
I can assure you that Stack Exchange Inc. retains lawyers and they know very well what their obligations are, and that they are meeting them.
It’s not going to change the way your posts are being handled
Also, this was explained to you in the meta post in question.
I note that you have a pattern of ignoring explanations that were already given to you, in favour of your own version of events.
23:29
@KarlKnechtel None-the-less SE is in direct violation of the license agreement, that expressly requires attribution and copyright notice, I quoted this portion of the license.
What do you want to do about it?
there’s a contact us link at the bottom
@polcott No, it isn't. I just finished clearly explaining to you how it isn't. The answer you got on Meta also clearly explained how it isn't.
@KevinB So you didn't bother to read the actual words of the actual license?
I don't need to
It's entirely irrelevant to whether or not your post should be deleted.
If you think SE is breaking their own license, contact them. that's not a community concern.

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