Welcome to the Power Users community on Codidact!
Power Users is a Q&A site for questions about the usage of computer software and hardware. We are still a small site and would like to grow, so please consider joining our community. We are looking forward to your questions and answers; they are the building blocks of a repository of knowledge we are building together.
How to handle crossposts
How do we want to handle cross-posts, e.g. posts which are completely copied verbatim from other sites?
A couple of approaches I could think of:
-
IF they fulfil the original site's license requirements they are fine. Otherwise they should be deleted.
-
IF they fulfil the original site's license requirements AND link to each other on BOTH sites, they are fine. Otherwise they should be deleted. This should ensure that no time of users is wasted, who otherwise might spend their free time to work on a solution for an already solved problem or can't find the solution if they have the same problem.
-
Delete them, so they don't hurt the site's rating in search engines
-
Edit them so they will fulfil the original site's license requirements about giving credit etc.
-
Any other suggestions?
(roughly 50 % of the questions posted up to now would be affected)
2 answers
This isn't really a license issue.
You are assuming that the post was written elsewhere first, then copied here. However, since the same user posted all of them, we should assume that user wrote the post once locally, then copied that to all the sites. In any case, it's the user's IP, and the user is free to copy it to wherever they like.
The only time this would not apply is if users have agreed on another site that anything posted there belongs to the site only, and the original author has given up all rights. That is probably not the case. Even then, its the user posting here that is violating someone else's copyright, not us.
The real question is what our policy should be towards a user posting the same question at essentially the same time in other places because of what it means to this site and the volunteers that might answer, not because of IP concerns.
Personally, I think that's rather an obnoxious thing to do because it's abusing the free help of the volunteers on all the sites. Multiple people across the internet may spend time writing answers, without the benefit of seeing what others have already written. The answers are then scattered about, with only the original asker benefitting from them all.
I propose our policy be
- Questions first posted here aren't allowed to be posted elsewhere for some time limit (3 days?).
- When a question here is later posted elsewhere, the question here must be updated with a link to the duplicate. This includes any additional future duplicates.
- Questions first posted elsewhere may be posted here only after some time limit (3 days?).
- Questions here that are copies of elsewhere must include a clear statement to that effect, and links to any copies of the same questions elsewhere.
Violation of these rules is a serious abuse of this site and the volunteers here. The first offence results in account suspension of a few days, and the second offence a couple of weeks. By the third offence, the account is simply deleted.
Can we really assume that they are originally written by the same individual? They are posted on other sites by many different accounts and they never react to any comment asking if they are the same user.
That's a good point I hadn't considered. That does make the license more relevant. I figured one user was just trying to maximize their chance for a quick answer. I don't know why another user would copy posts between sites, but I suppose we can't be sure it is a single user when they won't say so. The timestamps on the various copies might provide a clue.
I'm not sure what to do in the case of users we can't tell are the same. The safe thing would be to delete the post altogether. Others than the original author shouldn't be copying posts from elsewhere, and certainly shouldn't be doing it without attribution.
It would be more work, and I don't think it's worth it, but we could delete a duplicate post only if it was posted later than another one out there. If the other way around, we send a message to the other site demanding attribution or removal of the post. Again though, I don't think getting into this level of detail makes sense.
Another one just showed up: How can I record 2 simultaneous Teams meetings, on the same computer, without audio cross interference?
In this case, a mod found the duplicate and posted the link in a comment. I think the correct action would have been to close the question because of it being a cross-post without even a mention of that fact.
1 comment thread