It baffles me that this guy didn't understand that presenting content written by another person as his own creation is plagiarism. He appears to be a native English speaker, so there's no culture / language barrier. His excuse appears to be that the content was already on Stack Overflow, so it doesn't count as plagiarism. Sheesh!
I clearly made a mistake back then of not citing the original StackOverflow answer from 2011. I disagree it constitutes plagiarism since it’s on the site. But I will own up to the mistake — Engineer20212 hours ago
@PM2Ring Wasn't aware that the definition of plagiarism is apparently "copying content without attribution except if you do it on SO and the content was taken from SO".
@VLAZ My favourite example (from Physics.SE) was a guy who essentially said: "It's not plagiarism. It's on Wikipedia". He got quite angry, and assured me that he was from a good family, and it was an insult to claim that he was stealing content.
He was from a culture with a very strong class hierarchy. I guess he just took it for granted that upper class people can freely use stuff produced by the plebs who put stuff on Wikipedia. ;)
Also, in some cultures, the attitude tends to be that once information is out there, it's fair game for everyone. If you want to protect information, you keep it secret, and only pass it on to the family or qualified guild members.
Interesting. Wasn't aware. But it does sound very good. I've been toying around building a world that I wanted to do "cyberpunk but medieval" and transplant the "megacorps" from cyberpunk titles into a more of a traditional fantasy setting as "megaguilds". I wasn't sure how to exactly go about it but this sounds like a really good way. Guilds hoard knowledge which allows them a lot of power and influence.
It does. Hoarding knowledge within families makes progress really slow.
Eg, Indian mathematicians developed a lot of trigonometry, but it took a long time because there wasn't much collaboration. And they'd only publicise results, not methods. If they'd been more open to collaboration, they might have developed calculus a couple of centuries before the West.
@PM2Ring Yeah, that much is obvious. However, will work really well in my world. It would mean others outside the guilds won't have access to as much knowledge (magic or even stuff like metallurgy and smithing can be limited and held in the grasp of megaguilds). It does carry the "punk" theme nicely. I really appreciate this piece of knowledge, it does give me even more ideas for how to go about that setting.
@PM2Ring Somewhat similar to alchemy. Well, not that alchemy was getting anywhere scientifically but practitioners were very often encrypting their written results, lest somebody else stole them.
@VLAZ No worries. And of course, guilds had a strong hereditary component, too. It was often hard to join a guild if you weren't related to a guild member.