Difference between revisions of "Plagiarism" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Plagiarism''' is a form of [[academic dishonesty]];
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[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
it is a matter of deceit: fooling a reader into believing that certain written material is original when it is not. Plagiarism is a serious academic offense when the goal is to obtain some sort of personal academic credit or personal recognition.
 
  
Plagiarism is not necessarily the same as [[copyright infringement]], which occurs when one violates [[copyright law]].  
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'''Plagiarism''' is taking the ideas of another and using them without giving proper credit. It is a form of stealing and a serious academic offense.  
  
“Observe all [[copyright]] laws and terms of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License Free Document License]. [[Plagiarism]] is stealing.
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Plagiarism is not necessarily the same as [[copyright]] infringement, which occurs when one violates copyright law by failing to get permission from the copyright holder. A violation of the terms of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License Free Document License] can be plagiarism when a proper historical trail of contributions is not present as a reference or a hyperlink in an article.
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Plagiarism is unethical behavior that can generate various forms of social punishment such as loss of reputation, failure in a course at a school, loss of a professional job, recall of a book, or forfeiture of a license.
  
 
== Definition ==
 
== Definition ==
 
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{{readout|Plagiarism is the passing off of another person's work as one's own|right}}. The key is that a person claims credit or appears to claim credit for writing done by someone else. Accidental plagiarism is usually the result of poor citation or referencing, poor preparation, or a misunderstanding of plagiarism. Deliberate plagiarism is an attempt to claim another person's work as one's own, usually by removing telltale evidence so the plagiarism is hard to spot.
Plagiarism is the passing off of another person's work as one's own. The key is that a person is claiming credit for writing done by someone else.   Accidental plagiarism is usually the result of poor [[citation style|citation or referencing]] or of poor preparation or a misunderstanding of plagiarism. Deliberate plagiarism is an attempt to claim another person's work as one's own, usually by removing tell-tale evidence so the plagiarism is hard to spot.
 
  
 
An unacknowledged use of words, ideas, information, research, or findings not one's own, taken from any source is plagiarism only if a person is claiming personal credit for originality. It is not plagiarism to use well-known facts without acknowledging a source because readers understand the author is not claiming originality.
 
An unacknowledged use of words, ideas, information, research, or findings not one's own, taken from any source is plagiarism only if a person is claiming personal credit for originality. It is not plagiarism to use well-known facts without acknowledging a source because readers understand the author is not claiming originality.
  
Collective unsigned works—like Wikipedia—that do not assign credit for originality to particular people do not commit plagiarism. Encyclopedias rarely cite their sources (although Wikipedia often does.) Furthermore technical manuals routinely copy from other manuals without attribution. The ''Microsoft Manual of Style for Technical Publications'' Third Edition (2003) by Microsoft does not even mention plagiarism, nor does ''Science and Technical Writing: A Manual of Style'', Second Edition (2000) by Philip Rubens.
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Some claim that the intent of a plagiarist is irrelevant: "The act of quoting material without including the indicia of a quotation should be sufficient to convict someone of plagiarism."<ref name=Standler>Ronald B. Standler, [http://www.rbs2.com/plag.pdf Plagiarism in Colleges in USA] Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref> According to Teddi Fishman, plagiarism can be defined by five constituent elements: Plagiarism occurs when someone:
 
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#Uses words, ideas, or work products
According to [http://www.dianahacker.com/ Diana Hacker], "Three acts are plagiarism: (1) failing to cite quotations and borrowed ideas, (2) failing to enclose borrowed language in quotation marks and (3) failing to put summaries and paraphrases in your own words." [http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/book.asp?1149000255 A Pocket Style Manual], 4h ed., 2004 Bedford/St. Martin's, pp 228-30. Other experts say that absence of quotation marks is not by itself plagiarism. If they have been removed to hide plagiarism that proves the plagiarism is deliberate. For other interpretations see [http://www.mla.org/ MLA] (Modern Language Association) (115), the [http://www.apa.org/ APA] (American Psychological Association) (157-158), [http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/about.html Chicago-Style] (186).
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#Attributable to another identifiable person or source
 
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#Without attributing the work to the source from which it was obtained
Self-plagiarism is the act of copying one's published or submitted writing without mentioning the previous publication. For example, in academic assignments, the submission of the same paper in more than one course is considered self-plagiarism.  Self-plagiarism is not usually considered an academic offense, but the deceit involved in submitting the same material for credit in different courses is considered unethical.  It is common for scholars to rephrase and republish their own work.  
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#In  a  situation  in which  there  is  a  legitimate  expectation  of  original authorship
 
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#In  order  to obtain  some  benefit,  credit,  or  gain  which  need  not  be 
Plagiarism is a serious academic offense which can result in punishment ranging from a failing grade on the particular assignment or the course, an academic suspension or expulsion. Being found guilty of plagiarism can ruin an academic career; it may result in revocation of one's degree or the loss of one's job and will result in the loss of academic credibility.
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monetary<ref> Teddi Fishman, [http://www.bmartin.cc/pubs/09-4apcei/4apcei-Fishman.pdf “We know it when we see it” is not good enough: toward a standard definition of plagiarism that transcends theft, fraud, and copyright"] 4th Asia Pacific Conference on Educational Integrity (4APCEI) University of Wollongong, Australia, September 28–30, 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref>
  
Although plagiarism is often loosely referred to as "theft" or "stealing," it has not been prosecuted, according to [http://faculty.law.lsu.edu/stuartgreen/pdf/j-green2.pdf  Stuart Green].  Instead, acts that constitute plagiarism are in some instances treated as [[copyright infringement]], [[unfair competition]], or a violation of the doctrine of [[moral rights]].  More often, charges of plagiarism are resolved through disciplinary proceedings.
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Self-plagiarism is the act of copying one's published or submitted writing without mentioning the previous publication. For example, in academic assignments, the submission of the same paper in more than one course is considered self-plagiarism. Self-plagiarism is not usually considered an academic offense, but the deceit involved in submitting the same material for credit in different courses is considered unethical. It is common for scholars to rephrase and republish their own work, as they are constantly developing their ideas.
 
 
Just as there can be plagiarism without lawbreaking, it is possible to violate copyright law without plagiarizing. For example, one could distribute the full text of a bestseller on the Internet while giving credit for it to the original author, financially damaging the author and publisher.
 
  
 
==Excuses used for plagiarism==
 
==Excuses used for plagiarism==
 
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Intentional plagiarism where an entire essay or research paper is copied from another source is blamed on a combination of [[stress]] and [[laziness]]. Unintentional plagiarism is blamed on a lack of knowledge about how to cite sources. Plagiarism is so easy to do that many students may not even realize that they might be guilty of plagiarism. Another reason sometimes blamed for plagiarism is [[cryptomnesia]], recalling of memories without realizing their source and thinking these memories are original creations. [[Helen Keller]] claimed to have been a victim of cryptomnesia when she wrote "The Frost King."
Intentional plagiarism where an entire essay or research paper is copied from another source is blamed on a combination of [[stress]] and [[laziness]]. Unintentional plagiarism is blamed on a lack of knowledge about how to cite sources. Plagiarism is so easy to do that many students may not even realize that they might be guilty of plagiarism. Another reason sometimes blamed for plagiarism is [[cryptomnesia]], recalling of memories without realizing their source and thinking these memories are original creations. [[Helen Keller]] claimed to have been a victim of cryptomnesia when she wrote "The Frost King" (see below).
 
  
 
==Frequency of plagiarism==
 
==Frequency of plagiarism==
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There is no definitive research into the frequency of plagiarism. Any research that has taken place has focused on universities. There are no published statistics for the school or college sectors; awarding bodies do not maintain statistics on plagiarism.
  
There is no definitive research into the frequency of plagiarism. Any [http://www.ejel.org/volume-2/vol2-issue1/issue1-art25.htm research] that has taken place has focused on universities. There are no published statistics for the school or college sectors; awarding bodies do not maintain statistics on plagiarism.
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Of the forms of cheating (including plagiarism, inventing data and cheating during an exam), students admit to plagiarism more than any other. Twenty five percent to 90 percent of students admit to plagiarism. However, this figure reduces considerably when students are asked about the frequency of "serious" plagiarism, such as copying most of an assignment or purchasing a complete paper from a website. In those instances only 20 percent and 10 percent report as having plagiarized at that level.
 
 
Of the forms of cheating (including plagiarism, inventing data and cheating during an exam), students admit to plagiarism more than any other. 25% to 90% of students admit to plagiarism. However, this figure reduces considerably when students are asked about the frequency of "serious" plagiarism (such as copying most of an assignment or purchasing a complete paper from a website 20% and 10%).
 
  
 
== Avoiding plagiarism ==
 
== Avoiding plagiarism ==
  
In academic circles, plagiarism is avoided by using a citation style, such as [[MLA style]], [[The Chicago Manual of Style|Chicago style]], or [[APA style]]. Generally speaking, facts that are common knowledge (for example, the date that [[World War II|WWII]] ended) need not be referenced, while facts that are not considered common knowledge in one's field must be cited. Similarly, a quote from any source, words or information, even if paraphrased, or any ideas not one's own must be cited.  
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In academic circles, plagiarism is avoided by using a citation style, such as [[MLA style]], [[The Chicago Manual of Style|Chicago style]], or [[APA style]]. Generally speaking, facts that are common knowledge, for example the date that [[World War II|WWII]] ended, need not be referenced; while facts that are not considered common knowledge in one's field must be cited. Similarly, a quote from any source, words or information, even if paraphrased, or any ideas not one's own must be cited.  
  
For instance, while it is acceptable to copy several paragraphs of text from a book and place them in a paper, if the source of the text (the author's name and title of the work) is not identified, even if the text is well known (for example, an excerpt from [[Lewis Carroll]]'s [[Jabberwocky]]), it is considered plagiarism.  
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For instance, while it is acceptable to copy several paragraphs of text from a book and place them in a paper, if the source of the text (the author's name and title of the work) is not identified, even if the text is well known, for example an excerpt from [[Lewis Carroll]]'s ''Jabberwocky'', it is considered plagiarism.  
  
Similarly, it is considered plagiarism to take someone's idea and then present it as one's own work. However, it is not considered plagiarism when two (or more) people independently come up with the same ideas. This is commonly termed '''simultaneous inspiration''', and comes about as the result of people exposed to the same source and interpreting it similarly.  
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Similarly, it is considered plagiarism to take someone's idea and then present it as one's own work. However, it is not considered plagiarism when two (or more) people independently come up with the same ideas. This can be the result of '''simultaneous inspiration''', which happens when many people exposed to the same source and some interpret it similarly. This also can happen with short logical phrases that are easily put together by many people independently.
  
 
There is some difference of opinion over how much credit must be given in non-academic settings, such as when preparing a [[newspaper]] article or historical account. Generally, reference is made to original [[source]] material as much as possible, and writers avoid taking credit for others' work. The use of facts in non-academic settings, rather than works of creative expression, does not usually constitute plagiarism.
 
There is some difference of opinion over how much credit must be given in non-academic settings, such as when preparing a [[newspaper]] article or historical account. Generally, reference is made to original [[source]] material as much as possible, and writers avoid taking credit for others' work. The use of facts in non-academic settings, rather than works of creative expression, does not usually constitute plagiarism.
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==Commercial plagiarism and anti-plagiarism services==
 
==Commercial plagiarism and anti-plagiarism services==
  
A market has emerged for pre-written papers, often via websites offering essays and papers for sale to students. Some sites provide free documents because they receive monetary support from sponsors. Other websites offer essays for money. These websites provide a database of topics or custom-made essays on any topic for a fee. Some websites offer monthly subscriptions while others offer a price per essay. Generally, such sites include a copyright statement or anti-plagiarism notice with their papers.
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A market has emerged for pre-written papers, often via websites offering essays and papers for sale to students. Some sites provide free documents because they receive monetary support from sponsors. Other websites offer essays for money. These websites provide a database of topics or custom-made essays on any topic for a fee. Some websites offer monthly subscriptions while others offer a price per essay. Generally, such sites include a copyright statement or anti-plagiarism notice with their papers.
  
 
Similarly, a counter-industry has developed, with companies offering services for schools and instructors to compare a student's papers to a database of sources and search for plagiarism.
 
Similarly, a counter-industry has developed, with companies offering services for schools and instructors to compare a student's papers to a database of sources and search for plagiarism.
  
 
== Plagiarism and the Internet ==
 
== Plagiarism and the Internet ==
{{unreferenced}}
 
  
The Internet has increased plagiarism, since students are now able to use search engines to find information, which can be easily copied and pasted into students’ documents. The Internet can also be used to combat plagiarism. Teachers use search engines for parts of suspicious essays. Unfortunately, search engine checks offer only a partial solution against plagiarism. The best solution would be to check against a continuously growing body of text. This prevents students from turning in work that may not have been published on the Internet but is otherwise plagiarized.
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The Internet has provided increased opportunities for plagiarism, since people are now able to use search engines to find information, which can be easily copied and pasted into documents. The Internet can also be used to combat plagiarism. Teachers use search engines for parts of suspicious essays. However, search engine checks offer only a partial solution to spotting plagiarism. The best solution would be to check against a continuously growing body of text. This prevents students from turning in work that may not have been published on the Internet but is otherwise plagiarized.
  
Using search engines to check papers for plagiarism is impractical, since teachers lack the time necessary to check each paper with an online search engine. Many teachers have turned to plagiarism prevention services that automate the search by comparing each paper against millions of online sources. The techniques used in such engines are often based on variants of the [[Rabin-Karp string search algorithm]]. Despite these counteractions, evidence suggests that the Internet increases the frequency of plagiarism.
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Many teachers have turned to plagiarism prevention services that automate the search by comparing each paper against millions of online sources. In the early 2000s, many students in Canadian colleges and universities publicly protested against online plagiarism-preventing services, claiming that the use of such services reduced the personal involvement of the instructor with the student's work, introduced the possibility of incorrectly-cited quotations being considered as plagiarized text and, most importantly, assumed ''[[a priori]]'' guilt on the part of the student(s) in question.
  
In the early 2000s, many students in Canadian colleges and universities publicly protested against online plagiarism-preventing services, claiming that the use of such services reduced the personal involvement of the instructor with the student's work, introduced the possibility of incorrectly-cited quotations being considered as plagiarized text and, most importantly, assumed [[a priori]] guilt on the part of the student(s) in question.
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==Plagiarism and the law==
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Plagiarism by students can result in punishment ranging from a failing grade on the particular assignment or course, suspension, or expulsion. Professional academics found guilty of plagiarism can ruin an academic career, result in revocation of one's degree or license, or the loss of one's job.
  
Internet plagiarism is not limited to academic dishonesty. Perhaps the most visible example occurred in late 2005 and early 2006 when the web site [[Ebaumsworld.com]] was accused of stealing and otherwise plagiarizing various [[Macromedia Flash|Flash]] [[animations]] from such web sites as [[Something Awful|SomethingAwful.com]], sister site [[Fark.com]] and [[YTMND.com]].
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Although plagiarism is often referred to as "theft" or "stealing," it is not usually prosecuted under [[criminal law]]. Although plagiarism is not necessarily a criminal or civil offense, if it infringes an author's [[intellectual property]] rights, including [[copyright]] or [[trademark]], it is illegal.<ref>Stephanie Morrow, [https://www.legalzoom.com/articles/plagiarism-what-is-it-exactly Plagiarism: What is it, Exactly?] ''LegalZoom'', December 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref> Acts that constitute plagiarism may be treated as [[copyright infringement]], [[unfair competition]], or a violation of the doctrine of [[moral rights]]. More often charges of plagiarism are resolved through disciplinary proceedings.  
  
==Plagiarism and the law==
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Just as there can be plagiarism without lawbreaking, it is possible to violate copyright law without plagiarizing. For example, one could distribute the full text of a bestseller on the [[Internet]] while giving credit for it to the original author, financially damaging the author and publisher.
  
In [[common law]] countries, plagiarism itself is not a crime; there are copyright infringement laws, and those laws are primarily in the civil codes; criminal codes require that it is both [[willful]] and noticeable amounts of money are involved [http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap5.html#506].  
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In [[common law]] countries, plagiarism itself is not a [[crime]]; there are copyright infringement laws, and those laws are primarily in the civil codes; criminal codes require that it is both [[willful]] and noticeable amounts of money or physical property are involved.<ref>[http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap5.html#506 Copyright Notice, Deposit, and Registration] U.S. Copyright Office. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref>
  
According to some academic ethics codes, a complaint of plagiarism may be initiated or proven by any person. The person originating the complaint need not be the owner of the plagiarized content, nor need there be communication from a content owner directing that an investigation or disciplinary be conducted. In many academic settings intent does not even enter into consideration. [http://www.rbs2.com/plag.htm#anchor111111  Princeton] dismisses intent as "irrelevant" and [http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/isit.html Doug Johnson] says that intent is "not necessary for a work to be considered plagiaristic and as one respondent put it, 'ignorance of the law is no excuse.'  Some universities will even [http://www.rbs2.com/plag.htm#anchor777777 revoke a degree] if plagiarism comes to light.
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According to some academic ethics codes, a complaint of plagiarism may be initiated or proven by any person. The person originating the complaint need not be the owner of the plagiarized content, nor need there be communication from a content owner directing that an investigation or disciplinary be conducted. In many academic settings intent does not even enter into consideration. Some universities will even revoke a degree if plagiarism is proved.<ref name=Standler/>
  
== Famous accusations and examples of plagiarism ==
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== Famous examples and accusations of plagiarism ==
 
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* A young [[Helen Keller]] was accused in 1892 for plagiarizing "The Frost King," a short story that strongly resembled Margaret T. Canby's story "The Frost Fairies." She was brought before a tribunal of the [[Perkins Institute for the Blind]], where she was acquitted by a single vote. She "remained paranoid about plagiarism ever after." <ref>Walter Kendrick, “Her Hands Were a Bridge to the World” (''New York Times'', August 30, 1998).</ref> <ref>Helen Keller, [http://www.afb.org/MyLife/book.asp?ch=P1Ch14 Part I. The Story of My Life Chapter XIV] ''The Story of My Life'', 1903. Retrieved November 28, 2017. </ref>
* A young [[Helen Keller]] was accused in 1892 for plagiarizing "The Frost King," a short story that strongly resembled Margaret T. Canby's story "The Frost Fairies." She was brought before a tribunal of the [[Perkins Institute for the Blind]], where she was acquitted by a single vote. She "remained paranoid about plagiarism ever after." <ref>{{cite web | author=Walter Kendrick | title=Her Hands Were a Bridge to the World | work=The New York Times | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E03E3D9133DF933A0575BC0A96E958260  | date=August 30 | year=1998}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web | author=Helen Keller | title= The Story of My Life | url=http://www.afb.org/MyLife/book.asp?ch=P1Ch14 | year= 1903}}</ref>
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*The 1922 film ''[[Nosferatu]]'' was an unauthorized adaptation of [[Bram Stoker]]'s novel ''[[Dracula]]''. Stoker's widow sued the producers of ''Nosferatu'', and had many of the film's copies destroyed (although some yet remain).
*The [[1922]] film ''[[Nosferatu]]'' was an unauthorized adaptation of [[Bram Stoker]]'s novel ''[[Dracula]]''. Stoker's widow sued the producers of ''Nosferatu'', and had many of the film's copies destroyed (although some remain).
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* [[George Harrison]] was successfully sued in a prolonged suit that began in 1971 for plagiarizing the [[Chiffons]]' "He's So Fine" for the melody of his own "My Sweet Lord." <ref>Frank Mastropolo, [http://ultimateclassicrock.com/george-harrison-my-sweet-lord-plagiarism/ George Harrison Found Guilty of 'My Sweet Lord' Plagiarism] ''Ultimate Classic Rock'', August 31, 2016. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref>
* [[George Harrison]] was successfully sued in a prolonged suit that began in [[1971]] for plagiarizing the [[Chiffons]]' "[[He's So Fine]]" for the melody of his own "[[My Sweet Lord]]." [http://abbeyrd.best.vwh.net/mysweet.htm]
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* [[Alex Haley]] settled a lawsuit with Harold Courlander for $650,000 in 1978 for a passage in Haley's novel ''Roots'' that imitated his novel ''The African''. “Accusations that portions of ''Roots'' were plagiarized or concocted plagued Mr. Haley from soon after the book's publication up until his death in February 1992.”<ref>Esther B. Fein, "Book Notes," ''New York Times'', March 3, 1993.</ref>  
* ''Eres t&uacute;'', [[Spain|Spanish]] song at the [[Eurovision Song Contest 1973]] was a plagiarism of a [[Slovenia]]n (then [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslav]]) song from [[Eurovision Song Contest 1966|ESC 1966]] (''Berta Ambro&#382;'': ''Brez Besed'') but due to the [[Cold War]] it wasn't disqualified.
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* According to a [[Boston University]] investigation into academic misconduct, [[Martin Luther King|Martin Luther King, Jr.]] plagiarized portions of his [[doctoral thesis]] that summarizes the concepts of God expressed by Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman. "A committee of scholars at Boston University concluded yesterday that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. plagiarized portions of his doctoral dissertation, completed there in the 1950s." Despite the plagiarism, the BU committee recommended that King's doctoral degree should not be revoked. <ref>Charles A. Radin, "Panel Confirms Plagiarism by King at BU," ''Boston Globe'', October 11, 1991.</ref>
* Atari's video game [[Pong]] was accused by [[Magnavox]] of being a copy of the Odyssey's tennis game. [[Nolan Bushnell]] saw [[Ralph Baer]]'s version at a 1972 electronics show in [[Burlingame, California]].  Bushnell then founded Atari and established Pong as its featured game.  "Baer and Magnavox filed suit against Bushnell and Atari in 1973 and finally reached an out-of-court settlement in 1976. It marked the end for Odyssey and the beginning of the Atari age." <ref>"A 30 Year Odyssey for Home Video Games," ''Chicago Sun-Times'', February 16, 2003</ref> [http://www.pong-story.com/odyssey.htm]
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* [[James A. Mackay]], a [[Scotland|Scottish]] historian, was forced to withdraw all copies of his biography of [[Alexander Graham Bell]] from circulation in 1998 because he plagiarized the last major work on the subject, a 1973 work. Also accused of plagiarizing material on biographies of [[Mary Queen of Scots]], [[Andrew Carnegie]], and [[Sir William Wallace]], he was forced to withdraw his next work, on [[John Paul Jones]], in 1999 for an identical reason. <ref>Ralph Blumenthal, "Repeat Accusations of Plagiarism Taint Prolific Biographer," ''New York Times,'' September 21, 1999.</ref> <ref>Ralph Blumenthal, "Familiarity Stops the Presses," ''New York Times,'' September 26, 1999.</ref>
* [[Alex Haley]] settled a lawsuit with Harold Courlander for a passage in Haley's novel [[Roots: The Saga of an American Family|''Roots'']] that imitated his novel ''The African''. "Accusations that portions of 'Roots' (Doubleday hard cover, Dell paperback) were plagiarized or concocted plagued Mr. Haley from soon after the book's publication up until his death in February 1992. In 1978, Mr. Haley was sued for plagiarism by Harold Courlander, author of the novel 'The Africans,' and paid him $650,000 in an out-of-court settlement." <ref>{{cite web | author=Esther B. Fein | title=Book Notes | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00613FC3E580C708CDDAA0894DB494D81 | date=March 3 | year=1993}}</ref> Haley insisted that "the passages 'were in something somebody had given me, and I don't know who gave it to me . . . . Somehow or another, it ended up in the book." <ref>{{cite web | author=Anne S. Crowley| title=Research Help Supplies Backbone for Haley's Book | work=Chicago Tribune | url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/25059144.html?dids=25059144:25059144&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Oct+24%2C+1985&author=Anne+S+Crowley%2C+Associated+Press&pub=Chicago+Tribune+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&edition=&startpage=10.H&desc=RESEARCH+HELP+SUPPLIES+BACKBONE+FOR+HALEY%27S+BOOK | date=October 24 | year=1985}}</ref>
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* Psychology professor [[René Diekstra]] author of popular books, left [[Leiden University]] in 1997 after accusations of plagiarism.  
* Senator [[Joseph Biden]]
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* Historian [[Stephen Ambrose]] has been criticized for incorporating passages from the works of other authors into many of his books. He was first accused in 2002 by two writers for copying portions about [[World War II]] bomber pilots from [[Thomas Childers]]'s ''The Wings of Morning'' in his book ''The Wild Blue''.<ref>David D. Kirkpatrick, "2 Say Stephen Ambrose, Popular Historian, Copied Passages," ''New York Times,'' January 5, 2002.</ref> After admitting to the errors, the ''[[New York Times]]'' found further unattributed passages, and "Mr. Ambrose again acknowledged his errors and promised to correct them in later editions." <ref>David D. Kirkpatrick, [http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/11/us/as-historian-s-fame-grows-so-do-questions-on-methods.html "As Historian's Fame Grows, So Do Questions on Methods,"] ''New York Times,'' January 11, 2002. Retrieved November 28, 2017. </ref>
** Biden was forced to withdraw from the [[U.S. presidential election, 1988|1988 Democratic Presidential nominations]] when it was alleged that he had failed a 1965 introductory law school course on legal methodology due to plagiarism "Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., fighting to salvage his Presidential campaign . . . acknowledged 'a mistake' in his youth, when he plagiarized a law review article for a paper he wrote in his first year at law school.  Mr. Biden insisted, however, that he had done nothing 'malevolent,' that he had simply misunderstood the need to cite sources carefully." <ref>{{cite web | author=E.J. Dionne, Jr. | title=Biden Admits Plagiarism in School But Says It Was Not "Malevolent" | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40712FA3F5B0C7B8DDDA00894DF484D81 | date=September 18 | year=1987}}</ref> Biden withdrew from the race September 23, 1987, and reported the law school incident to the Deleware Supreme Court.  The court's Board of Professional Responsibility cleared him of any allegations. <ref>{{cite web | author=E.J. Dionne, Jr. | title=Professional Board Clears Biden in Two Allegations of Plagiarism | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0710FC39540C7A8EDDAC0894D1484D81 | date=May 29 | year=1989}}</ref>
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*[[Jayson Blair]], then a reporter for the ''[[New York Times]]'', plagiarized many articles and faked quotes in stories, including the [[Jessica Lynch]] and [[Beltway sniper attacks]] cases. He and several editors from the ''Times'' resigned in June 2003.
** Biden was also accused of plagiarizing portions of his speeches, and that he had copied several campaign speeches, notably those of British Labour leader [[Neil Kinnock]] and Senator [[Robert F. Kennedy]]. He denied those charges.  "And he asserted that another controversy, concerning recent reports of his using material from others' speeches without attribution, was 'much ado about nothing.'" <ref>{{cite web | author=E.J. Dionne, Jr. | title=Biden Admits Plagiarism in School But Says It Was Not "Malevolent" | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40712FA3F5B0C7B8DDDA00894DF484D81 | date=September 18 | year=1987}}</ref>
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*New Jersey high-school student [[Blair Hornstine]] had her admission to [[Harvard University]] revoked in July 2003 after she was found to have passed off speeches and writings by famous figures, including [[Bill Clinton]], as her own in articles she wrote as a student journalist for a local newspaper.
* [[Martin Luther King|Martin Luther King, Jr.]]  
+
* Long-time ''[[Baltimore Sun]]'' columnist [[Michael Olesker]] resigned on January 4, 2006, after being accused of plagiarizing other journalists' articles in his columns.
** According to a [[Boston University]] investigation into [[academic misconduct]], King plagiarized portions of his [[doctoral thesis]] that summarizes the concepts of God expressed by Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman. "A committee of scholars at Boston University concluded yesterday that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. plagiarized portions of his doctoral dissertation, completed there in the 1950s."  Despite the plagiarism, the BU committee recommended that King's doctoral degree should not be revoked. <ref>"Panel Confirms Plagiarism by King at BU" by Charles A. Radin, ''The Boston Globe'', October 11, 1991</ref>
+
* The doctoral thesis written by [[Kimberly Lanegran]] at the [[University of Florida]] was copied nearly verbatim by [[Marks Chabedi]] and submitted at [[The New School]]. When Lanegran discovered this, she launched an investigation into Chabedi and he was fired from a professorship at [[University of the Witwatersrand]] in South Africa, and The New School revoked his Ph.D.<ref>Kim Lanegran, [https://www.chronicle.com/article/Fending-Off-a-Plagiarist/44680 Fending Off a Plagiarist] ''Chronicle of Higher Education'', July 2, 2004. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref>  
** It has been charged that for his "I Have A Dream" speech King plagiarized the 1952 address of Archibald Carey to the Republican National Convention, the similarities being in the reference to the Samuel Francis Smith patriotic hymn "America" in the peroration followed by a listing of geographical locations from which the orator exhorts his audience to "let freedom ring." Many, however, believe that the comparisons are so slightly similar that they do not rise to the level of plagiarism.  [http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/facts/democrac/38.htm King's "I Have a Dream" Speech], [http://chem-gharbison.unl.edu/mlk/whose_dream_2.html Carey's Speech], [http://www.cbn.com/spirituallife/devotions/MyCountryTis.asp My Country, 'Tis of Thee]. [http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/outrage/mlking.asp]
 
* [[James A. Mackay]], a [[Scotland|Scottish]] historian, was forced to withdraw all copies of his biography of [[Alexander Graham Bell]] from circulation in [[1998]] because he plagiarized the last major work on the subject, a 1973 work.  Also accused of plagiarizing material on biographies of [[Mary Queen of Scots]], [[Andrew Carnegie]], and [[Sir William Wallace]], he was forced to withdraw his next work, on [[John Paul Jones]], in [[1999]] for an identical reason. <ref>{{cite web | author=Ralph Blumenthal | title=Repeat Accusations of Plagiarism Taint Prolific Biographer | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40E11FA34580C728EDDA00894D1494D81 | date=September 21 | year=1999}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web | author=Ralph Blumenthal | title=Familiarity Stops the Presses | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0C17F63A5B0C758EDDA00894D1494D81 | date=September 26 | year=1999}}</ref>
 
* [[Psychology]] [[professor]] [[René Diekstra]] author of popular books, left [[Leiden University]] in [[1997]] after accusations of plagiarism. Proceedings continued [[as of 2003]], with Diekstra contesting a report about him on this matter.
 
* Historian [[Stephen Ambrose]] has been criticized for incorporating passages from the works of other authors into many of his books.  He was first accused in [[2002]] by two writers for copying portions about [[World War II]] bomber pilots from [[Thomas Childers]]'s ''The Wings of Morning'' in his book ''The Wild Blue''.  <ref>{{cite web | author=David D. Kirkpatrick | title=2 Say Stephen Ambrose, Popular Historian, Copied Passages | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0914F934540C768CDDA80894DA404482 | date=January 5 | year=2002}}</ref> After admitting to the errors, the ''[[New York Times]]'' found further unattributed passages, and "Mr. Ambrose again acknowledged his errors and promised to correct them in later editions." <ref>{{cite web | author=David D. Kirkpatrick | title=As Historian's Fame Grows, So Do Questions on Methods | work=The New York Times | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60916FB355D0C728DDDA80894DA404482 | date=January 11 | year=2002}}</ref>
 
* [[Jayson Blair]], then a reporter for the ''[[New York Times]]'', plagiarized many articles and faked quotes in stories, including the [[Jessica Lynch]] and [[Beltway sniper attacks]] cases.  He and several editors from the ''Times'' resigned in June [[2003]].
 
* [[Moorestown Township, New Jersey]], high-school student [[Blair Hornstine]] had her admission to [[Harvard University]] revoked in July [[2003]] after she was found to have passed off speeches and writings by famous figures, including [[Bill Clinton]], as hers in articles she wrote as a student journalist for a local newspaper.
 
* In 2003, the United Kingdom Government was accused <sup>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2736149.stm]</sup> of copying some text from an article in the ''Middle East Review of International Affairs'' for its security dossier on Iraq, dubbed the '[[dodgy dossier]]'.
 
* Long-time ''[[Baltimore Sun]]'' columnist [[Michael Olesker]] resigned on [[January 4]], [[2006]], after being accused of plagiarizing other journalists' articles in his columns.
 
* The doctoral thesis written by [[Kimberly Lanegran]] at the [[University of Florida]] was copied nearly verbatim by [[Marks Chabedi]] and submitted at [[The New School]].  When Lanegran discovered this, she launched an investigation into Chabedi and he was fired from a professorship at [[University of the Witwatersrand]] in South Africa, and The New School revoked his Ph.D.
 
**[http://chronicle.com/free/v50/i43/43c00101.htm Kim Lanegran's account of this incident] published in the ''Chronicle of Higher Education''
 
**[http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/index/HGCMLCCAEXHRU9M7.pdf A retraction issued by a scholarly journal that published an article Chabedi plagiarized]
 
**(For those who wish to look up the actual dissertations in [http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=5&q=http://firstsearch.oclc.org/dbname%3DDiss%3BFSIP&e=10053 Dissertation Abstracts Online], the OCLC number for Lanegran's dissertation is AAG9801108 and the OCLC number for Chabedi's "dissertation" is AAI9980001.)
 
 
*Science fiction author [[Harlan Ellison]] sued and won in a case against [[James Cameron]], claiming that his film ''[[The Terminator]]'' plagiarized the two episodes he wrote for the television show ''[[The Outer Limits]]'': "Soldier" and "[[Demon with a Glass Hand]]".
 
*Science fiction author [[Harlan Ellison]] sued and won in a case against [[James Cameron]], claiming that his film ''[[The Terminator]]'' plagiarized the two episodes he wrote for the television show ''[[The Outer Limits]]'': "Soldier" and "[[Demon with a Glass Hand]]".
*[[Doris Kearns Goodwin]] ([[2002]] scandal
+
*[[Doris Kearns Goodwin]], 2002 scandal.<ref> by Timothy Noah, [http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/chatterbox/2002/01/doris_kearns_goodwin_liar.html Doris Kearns Goodwin, Liar: First she plagiarized. Then she claimed it wasn't plagiarism.] ''Slate Magazine,'' January, 2002. Retrieved November 28, 2017. </ref>
**[http://www.slate.com/id/2061056/ Doris Kearns Goodwin, Liar: First she plagiarized. Then she claimed it wasn't plagiarism.] by Timothy Noah, Slate Magazine, Jan. 2002
+
*Writer and television commentator [[Monica Crowley]] was accused of plagiarism for a 1999 ''Slate Magazine'' article on Richard Nixon.<ref>Timothy Noah, [http://www.slate.com/id/1003470/ Nixon's Monica Stonewalls About Plagiarism!] ''Slate''. Retrieved November 28, 2017.</ref>
**Timothy Noah's Nov. 2003 [http://slate.msn.com/id/2091197/| "Historians Rewrite History"] slate.com article on Goodwin and her defenders.
+
*Numerous passages of Robert Mason's 1983 Vietnam War memoir ''Chickenhawk'' were copied, almost word-for-word, by Charles Sasser and Ron Alexander in their 2001 book, ''Taking Fire''.
**[http://hnn.us/articles/590.html History News Network- How the Goodwin Story Developed]
+
*Conservative [[blogger]] [[Ben Domenech]], soon after he was hired to write a blog for the ''[[Washington Post]]'' in 2006, was found to have plagiarized a number of columns and articles he'd written for his college newspaper and ''National Review Online,'' lifting passages from a variety of sources ranging from well-known pundits to amateur film critics. After initially blaming any wrongdoing on past editors, Domenech eventually resigned and apologized.
*Writer and television commentator [[Monica Crowley]] was accused of plagiarism for a [http://www.slate.com/id/1003470/| 1999 Slate Magazine article] on Richard Nixon.   
+
*[[Dan Brown]], author of ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'', has been twice accused of plagiarism resulting in lawsuits, but both suits were ultimately dismissed. Brown was accused of "appropriating the architecture" of the 1978 novel ''[[Holy Blood, Holy Grail]]'' by [[Michael Baigent]] and [[Richard Leigh (author)|Richard Leigh]]. A British judge dismissed the copyright infringement claim in April 2006. The publicity brought ''Holy Blood, Holy Grail'' back to the bestseller list. Additionally, Brown was accused by novelist Lewis Perdue for plagiarizing his novels ''The Da Vinci Legacy'' (1983) and ''Daughter of God'' (2000). A U.S. judge dismissed that case in August 2005.
*[[Ethnic Studies]] professor and activist [[Ward Churchill]] is currently being investigated on [[Ward Churchill academic fraud and plagiarism allegations|charges of plagiarism, falsifying research]].
+
*[[Kaavya Viswanathan]], a Harvard University student and novelist, whose first novel was ''How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life'' (2006), is reported to contain plagiarized passages from at least five other novels. Her publisher, Little, Brown and Co. subsequently withdrew all editions of the book and rescinded her publishing deal.
*[[Volodymyr Lytvyn]], speaker (2002-present) of the [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] parliament ([[Verkhovna Rada]]) in a 2001 article in a popular daily newspaper plagiarized (in fact, translated and attributed to himself) an article by [[Thomas Carothers]] "Civil Society" (published in 1999).
 
*
 
*Numerous passages of Robert Mason's 1983 Vietnam War memoir [[Chickenhawk (book)|''Chickenhawk'']] were copied, almost word-for-word, by Charles Sasser and Ron Alexander in their 2001 book, ''Taking Fire''.
 
*Conservative [[blogger]] [[Ben Domenech]], soon after he was hired to write a blog for the [[Washington Post]] in [[2006]], was found to have plagiarized a number of columns and articles he'd written for his college newspaper and [[National Review]] Online, lifting passages from a variety of sources ranging from well-known pundits to amateur film critics. After initially blaming any wrongdoing on past editors, Domenech eventually resigned and apologized.
 
*[[Dan Brown]], author of ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'', has been [[Criticisms_of_The_Da_Vinci_Code|twice accused of plagiarism]] resulting in lawsuits, but both suits were ultimately dismissed.
 
** Brown was accused of "appropriating the architecture" of the novel ''[[The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail]]'' (1982) by [[Michael Baigent]] and [[Richard Leigh (author)|Richard Leigh]]. A British judge dismissed the copyright infringement claim in [[April]] [[2006]].
 
** Additionally, Brown was accused by novelist Lewis Perdue for plagiarizing his novels ''The Da Vinci Legacy'' (1983) and ''Daughter of God'' (2000). A U.S. judge dismissed the case in [[August]] [[2005]].
 
*[[Kaavya Viswanathan]], a Harvard University student and novelist, whose first novel was ''How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life'' (2006), is reported to contain plagiarized passages from at least five other novels. Her publisher, Little, Brown and Co. subsequently withdrew all editions of the book and rescinded her publishing deal.
 
*[[William H. Swanson]], CEO, of [[Raytheon]], admitted to plagiarism in claiming authorship for his booklet, "Swanson's Unwritten Rules of Management," after being exposed by [[The New York Times]].<ref>{{cite web | title=Raytheon Chairman & CEO Comments Regarding 'Unwritten Rules'| work=Raytheon News Release | url= http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/micro_stories.pl?ACCT=149999&TICK=RTN&STORY=/www/story/04-24-2006/0004346311&EDATE=Apr+24,+2006| accessdate=2006-05-02}}</ref>  On May 2, 2006, Raytheon withdrew distribution of the book.<ref>>{{cite news|url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/05/02/raytheon_halts_distribution_of_controversial_booklet_by_ceo/ |title=Raytheon halts distribution of controversial booklet by CEO|author=|publisher=AP/Boston.com|date=[[2006-05-02]]|accessdate=2006-05-02}}</ref>
 
 
 
==See also==
 
*[[Academic dishonesty]]
 
*[[Credit (creative arts)]]
 
*[[Fair use]]
 
*[[Scientific misconduct]]
 
*[[Cryptomnesia]]
 
*[[Essay mill]]
 
  
== References ==
+
== Notes ==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* [http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0511/p14s01-lire.html?s=hns What is the price of plagiarism?] A ''The Christian Science Monitor'' article
+
All links retrieved November 24, 2022.
* The [http://ahe.cqu.edu.au Assessment in Higher Education] web site's plagiarism page contains links to a variety of resources (articles, books, cheat sites, etc) on plagiarism.
 
* A new scholarly journal on the topic is "Plagiary: Cross-disciplinary Studies in Plagiarism, Fabrication, and Falsification." http://www.plagiary.org/
 
* [http://www.uk-student.net/modules/wfsection/viewarticles.php?category=8 How to Avoid Plagiarism and How to get better essays while reducing your work and plagiarism]
 
* [http://www.bobbyelliott.com/Plagiarism.htm Plagiarism FAQ]
 
* [http://www.stud.uni-karlsruhe.de/~udgk/plagi.php A massive list of songs that have been plagiarized from another groups' song or sound very similar] - this page is in German, but is mostly a large table of songs that can easily be read by English speakers
 
* [http://media.wiley.com/assets/165/44/jrnls_ABC_JB_lipson803.pdf The Responsible Plagiarist: Students Who Misuse Sources (PDF)]
 
* [http://education.indiana.edu/~frick/plagiarism/ Indiana University at Bloomington: Understanding Plagiarism]
 
* [http://kopi.sztaki.hu/index.php?language=eng&mainpage=home KOPI Online Plagiarism Search and Information Portal]
 
* [http://www.geocities.com/ferzenr/decalun.htm copycat82], the case-study, on a Ph.D. plagiarism, in the USA.
 
  
===Anti-plagiarism software===
+
* [http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0511/p14s01-lire.html?s=hns What is the price of plagiarism?] article in ''The Christian Science Monitor''.  
* [http://plagiarism.phys.virginia.edu/Wsoftware.html Wcopyfind]
+
* [http://media.wiley.com/assets/165/44/jrnls_ABC_JB_lipson803.pdf The Responsible Plagiarist: Understanding Students Who Misuse Sources (PDF)].
* [http://www.turnitin.com/ TurnItIn]
+
* [http://kopi.sztaki.hu/index.php?language=eng&mainpage=home KOPI Online Plagiarism Search and Information Portal].  
* [http://www.webmasterlabor.com/tools/checker Online Plagiarism Checker] Compares text with text that exists on the Internet
+
*[http://theory.stanford.edu/~aiken/moss/ Moss (a Measure Of Software Similarity)], a free online service to investigate source code plagiarism.  
* [http://www.canexus.com/eve/index.shtml EVE2 (Essay Verification Engine 2.4)]
 
* [http://www.plagiarism.tk/ Pl@giarism]
 
* [http://www.ithenticate.com/static/home.html ithenticate]
 
*[http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~aiken/moss.html Moss (a Measure Of Software Similarity)], a free online service to investigate source code plagiarism. [http://www.similix.com/ MossPlus] is the commercial version.
 
 
* [http://www.plagiarismchecker.com/ Plagiarism Checker], a free detector for teachers and authors
 
* [http://www.plagiarismchecker.com/ Plagiarism Checker], a free detector for teachers and authors
* [http://viper.csse.monash.edu.au/damocles/about/ Damocles]
+
* [https://plagiarismcheck.org/ Plagiarism Check]
* [http://www.berkshire.k12.oh.us/beta/free_plagiarism_search.htm Plagiarism Search], A free search engine promoting academic integrity. 
 
* [http://www.1hs.org/blog/?p=23 Firefox Plagiarism Plugin], A plagiarism search engine plugin for Firefox.
 
* The [http://essay.inspector.net.au Essay Inspector] is a web-based collusion detection application.
 
  
  
 
[[Category:Ethics]]
 
[[Category:Ethics]]
[[Category:Journalism ethics]]
 
[[Category:Criticism of journalism]]
 
[[Category:Scientific misconduct]]
 
  
 
{{Credit|57347351}}
 
{{Credit|57347351}}

Latest revision as of 06:23, 24 November 2022


Plagiarism is taking the ideas of another and using them without giving proper credit. It is a form of stealing and a serious academic offense.

Plagiarism is not necessarily the same as copyright infringement, which occurs when one violates copyright law by failing to get permission from the copyright holder. A violation of the terms of Free Document License can be plagiarism when a proper historical trail of contributions is not present as a reference or a hyperlink in an article.

Plagiarism is unethical behavior that can generate various forms of social punishment such as loss of reputation, failure in a course at a school, loss of a professional job, recall of a book, or forfeiture of a license.

Definition

Did you know?
Plagiarism is the passing off of another person's work as one's own

Plagiarism is the passing off of another person's work as one's own. The key is that a person claims credit or appears to claim credit for writing done by someone else. Accidental plagiarism is usually the result of poor citation or referencing, poor preparation, or a misunderstanding of plagiarism. Deliberate plagiarism is an attempt to claim another person's work as one's own, usually by removing telltale evidence so the plagiarism is hard to spot.

An unacknowledged use of words, ideas, information, research, or findings not one's own, taken from any source is plagiarism only if a person is claiming personal credit for originality. It is not plagiarism to use well-known facts without acknowledging a source because readers understand the author is not claiming originality.

Some claim that the intent of a plagiarist is irrelevant: "The act of quoting material without including the indicia of a quotation should be sufficient to convict someone of plagiarism."[1] According to Teddi Fishman, plagiarism can be defined by five constituent elements: Plagiarism occurs when someone:

  1. Uses words, ideas, or work products
  2. Attributable to another identifiable person or source
  3. Without attributing the work to the source from which it was obtained
  4. In a situation in which there is a legitimate expectation of original authorship
  5. In order to obtain some benefit, credit, or gain which need not be

monetary[2]

Self-plagiarism is the act of copying one's published or submitted writing without mentioning the previous publication. For example, in academic assignments, the submission of the same paper in more than one course is considered self-plagiarism. Self-plagiarism is not usually considered an academic offense, but the deceit involved in submitting the same material for credit in different courses is considered unethical. It is common for scholars to rephrase and republish their own work, as they are constantly developing their ideas.

Excuses used for plagiarism

Intentional plagiarism where an entire essay or research paper is copied from another source is blamed on a combination of stress and laziness. Unintentional plagiarism is blamed on a lack of knowledge about how to cite sources. Plagiarism is so easy to do that many students may not even realize that they might be guilty of plagiarism. Another reason sometimes blamed for plagiarism is cryptomnesia, recalling of memories without realizing their source and thinking these memories are original creations. Helen Keller claimed to have been a victim of cryptomnesia when she wrote "The Frost King."

Frequency of plagiarism

There is no definitive research into the frequency of plagiarism. Any research that has taken place has focused on universities. There are no published statistics for the school or college sectors; awarding bodies do not maintain statistics on plagiarism.

Of the forms of cheating (including plagiarism, inventing data and cheating during an exam), students admit to plagiarism more than any other. Twenty five percent to 90 percent of students admit to plagiarism. However, this figure reduces considerably when students are asked about the frequency of "serious" plagiarism, such as copying most of an assignment or purchasing a complete paper from a website. In those instances only 20 percent and 10 percent report as having plagiarized at that level.

Avoiding plagiarism

In academic circles, plagiarism is avoided by using a citation style, such as MLA style, Chicago style, or APA style. Generally speaking, facts that are common knowledge, for example the date that WWII ended, need not be referenced; while facts that are not considered common knowledge in one's field must be cited. Similarly, a quote from any source, words or information, even if paraphrased, or any ideas not one's own must be cited.

For instance, while it is acceptable to copy several paragraphs of text from a book and place them in a paper, if the source of the text (the author's name and title of the work) is not identified, even if the text is well known, for example an excerpt from Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky, it is considered plagiarism.

Similarly, it is considered plagiarism to take someone's idea and then present it as one's own work. However, it is not considered plagiarism when two (or more) people independently come up with the same ideas. This can be the result of simultaneous inspiration, which happens when many people exposed to the same source and some interpret it similarly. This also can happen with short logical phrases that are easily put together by many people independently.

There is some difference of opinion over how much credit must be given in non-academic settings, such as when preparing a newspaper article or historical account. Generally, reference is made to original source material as much as possible, and writers avoid taking credit for others' work. The use of facts in non-academic settings, rather than works of creative expression, does not usually constitute plagiarism.

Commercial plagiarism and anti-plagiarism services

A market has emerged for pre-written papers, often via websites offering essays and papers for sale to students. Some sites provide free documents because they receive monetary support from sponsors. Other websites offer essays for money. These websites provide a database of topics or custom-made essays on any topic for a fee. Some websites offer monthly subscriptions while others offer a price per essay. Generally, such sites include a copyright statement or anti-plagiarism notice with their papers.

Similarly, a counter-industry has developed, with companies offering services for schools and instructors to compare a student's papers to a database of sources and search for plagiarism.

Plagiarism and the Internet

The Internet has provided increased opportunities for plagiarism, since people are now able to use search engines to find information, which can be easily copied and pasted into documents. The Internet can also be used to combat plagiarism. Teachers use search engines for parts of suspicious essays. However, search engine checks offer only a partial solution to spotting plagiarism. The best solution would be to check against a continuously growing body of text. This prevents students from turning in work that may not have been published on the Internet but is otherwise plagiarized.

Many teachers have turned to plagiarism prevention services that automate the search by comparing each paper against millions of online sources. In the early 2000s, many students in Canadian colleges and universities publicly protested against online plagiarism-preventing services, claiming that the use of such services reduced the personal involvement of the instructor with the student's work, introduced the possibility of incorrectly-cited quotations being considered as plagiarized text and, most importantly, assumed a priori guilt on the part of the student(s) in question.

Plagiarism and the law

Plagiarism by students can result in punishment ranging from a failing grade on the particular assignment or course, suspension, or expulsion. Professional academics found guilty of plagiarism can ruin an academic career, result in revocation of one's degree or license, or the loss of one's job.

Although plagiarism is often referred to as "theft" or "stealing," it is not usually prosecuted under criminal law. Although plagiarism is not necessarily a criminal or civil offense, if it infringes an author's intellectual property rights, including copyright or trademark, it is illegal.[3] Acts that constitute plagiarism may be treated as copyright infringement, unfair competition, or a violation of the doctrine of moral rights. More often charges of plagiarism are resolved through disciplinary proceedings.

Just as there can be plagiarism without lawbreaking, it is possible to violate copyright law without plagiarizing. For example, one could distribute the full text of a bestseller on the Internet while giving credit for it to the original author, financially damaging the author and publisher.

In common law countries, plagiarism itself is not a crime; there are copyright infringement laws, and those laws are primarily in the civil codes; criminal codes require that it is both willful and noticeable amounts of money or physical property are involved.[4]

According to some academic ethics codes, a complaint of plagiarism may be initiated or proven by any person. The person originating the complaint need not be the owner of the plagiarized content, nor need there be communication from a content owner directing that an investigation or disciplinary be conducted. In many academic settings intent does not even enter into consideration. Some universities will even revoke a degree if plagiarism is proved.[1]

Famous examples and accusations of plagiarism

  • A young Helen Keller was accused in 1892 for plagiarizing "The Frost King," a short story that strongly resembled Margaret T. Canby's story "The Frost Fairies." She was brought before a tribunal of the Perkins Institute for the Blind, where she was acquitted by a single vote. She "remained paranoid about plagiarism ever after." [5] [6]
  • The 1922 film Nosferatu was an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula. Stoker's widow sued the producers of Nosferatu, and had many of the film's copies destroyed (although some yet remain).
  • George Harrison was successfully sued in a prolonged suit that began in 1971 for plagiarizing the Chiffons' "He's So Fine" for the melody of his own "My Sweet Lord." [7]
  • Alex Haley settled a lawsuit with Harold Courlander for $650,000 in 1978 for a passage in Haley's novel Roots that imitated his novel The African. “Accusations that portions of Roots were plagiarized or concocted plagued Mr. Haley from soon after the book's publication up until his death in February 1992.”[8]
  • According to a Boston University investigation into academic misconduct, Martin Luther King, Jr. plagiarized portions of his doctoral thesis that summarizes the concepts of God expressed by Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman. "A committee of scholars at Boston University concluded yesterday that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. plagiarized portions of his doctoral dissertation, completed there in the 1950s." Despite the plagiarism, the BU committee recommended that King's doctoral degree should not be revoked. [9]
  • James A. Mackay, a Scottish historian, was forced to withdraw all copies of his biography of Alexander Graham Bell from circulation in 1998 because he plagiarized the last major work on the subject, a 1973 work. Also accused of plagiarizing material on biographies of Mary Queen of Scots, Andrew Carnegie, and Sir William Wallace, he was forced to withdraw his next work, on John Paul Jones, in 1999 for an identical reason. [10] [11]
  • Psychology professor René Diekstra author of popular books, left Leiden University in 1997 after accusations of plagiarism.
  • Historian Stephen Ambrose has been criticized for incorporating passages from the works of other authors into many of his books. He was first accused in 2002 by two writers for copying portions about World War II bomber pilots from Thomas Childers's The Wings of Morning in his book The Wild Blue.[12] After admitting to the errors, the New York Times found further unattributed passages, and "Mr. Ambrose again acknowledged his errors and promised to correct them in later editions." [13]
  • Jayson Blair, then a reporter for the New York Times, plagiarized many articles and faked quotes in stories, including the Jessica Lynch and Beltway sniper attacks cases. He and several editors from the Times resigned in June 2003.
  • New Jersey high-school student Blair Hornstine had her admission to Harvard University revoked in July 2003 after she was found to have passed off speeches and writings by famous figures, including Bill Clinton, as her own in articles she wrote as a student journalist for a local newspaper.
  • Long-time Baltimore Sun columnist Michael Olesker resigned on January 4, 2006, after being accused of plagiarizing other journalists' articles in his columns.
  • The doctoral thesis written by Kimberly Lanegran at the University of Florida was copied nearly verbatim by Marks Chabedi and submitted at The New School. When Lanegran discovered this, she launched an investigation into Chabedi and he was fired from a professorship at University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa, and The New School revoked his Ph.D.[14]
  • Science fiction author Harlan Ellison sued and won in a case against James Cameron, claiming that his film The Terminator plagiarized the two episodes he wrote for the television show The Outer Limits: "Soldier" and "Demon with a Glass Hand".
  • Doris Kearns Goodwin, 2002 scandal.[15]
  • Writer and television commentator Monica Crowley was accused of plagiarism for a 1999 Slate Magazine article on Richard Nixon.[16]
  • Numerous passages of Robert Mason's 1983 Vietnam War memoir Chickenhawk were copied, almost word-for-word, by Charles Sasser and Ron Alexander in their 2001 book, Taking Fire.
  • Conservative blogger Ben Domenech, soon after he was hired to write a blog for the Washington Post in 2006, was found to have plagiarized a number of columns and articles he'd written for his college newspaper and National Review Online, lifting passages from a variety of sources ranging from well-known pundits to amateur film critics. After initially blaming any wrongdoing on past editors, Domenech eventually resigned and apologized.
  • Dan Brown, author of The Da Vinci Code, has been twice accused of plagiarism resulting in lawsuits, but both suits were ultimately dismissed. Brown was accused of "appropriating the architecture" of the 1978 novel Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh. A British judge dismissed the copyright infringement claim in April 2006. The publicity brought Holy Blood, Holy Grail back to the bestseller list. Additionally, Brown was accused by novelist Lewis Perdue for plagiarizing his novels The Da Vinci Legacy (1983) and Daughter of God (2000). A U.S. judge dismissed that case in August 2005.
  • Kaavya Viswanathan, a Harvard University student and novelist, whose first novel was How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life (2006), is reported to contain plagiarized passages from at least five other novels. Her publisher, Little, Brown and Co. subsequently withdrew all editions of the book and rescinded her publishing deal.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ronald B. Standler, Plagiarism in Colleges in USA Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  2. Teddi Fishman, “We know it when we see it” is not good enough: toward a standard definition of plagiarism that transcends theft, fraud, and copyright" 4th Asia Pacific Conference on Educational Integrity (4APCEI) University of Wollongong, Australia, September 28–30, 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  3. Stephanie Morrow, Plagiarism: What is it, Exactly? LegalZoom, December 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  4. Copyright Notice, Deposit, and Registration U.S. Copyright Office. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  5. Walter Kendrick, “Her Hands Were a Bridge to the World” (New York Times, August 30, 1998).
  6. Helen Keller, Part I. The Story of My Life Chapter XIV The Story of My Life, 1903. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  7. Frank Mastropolo, George Harrison Found Guilty of 'My Sweet Lord' Plagiarism Ultimate Classic Rock, August 31, 2016. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  8. Esther B. Fein, "Book Notes," New York Times, March 3, 1993.
  9. Charles A. Radin, "Panel Confirms Plagiarism by King at BU," Boston Globe, October 11, 1991.
  10. Ralph Blumenthal, "Repeat Accusations of Plagiarism Taint Prolific Biographer," New York Times, September 21, 1999.
  11. Ralph Blumenthal, "Familiarity Stops the Presses," New York Times, September 26, 1999.
  12. David D. Kirkpatrick, "2 Say Stephen Ambrose, Popular Historian, Copied Passages," New York Times, January 5, 2002.
  13. David D. Kirkpatrick, "As Historian's Fame Grows, So Do Questions on Methods," New York Times, January 11, 2002. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  14. Kim Lanegran, Fending Off a Plagiarist Chronicle of Higher Education, July 2, 2004. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  15. by Timothy Noah, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Liar: First she plagiarized. Then she claimed it wasn't plagiarism. Slate Magazine, January, 2002. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  16. Timothy Noah, Nixon's Monica Stonewalls About Plagiarism! Slate. Retrieved November 28, 2017.

External links

All links retrieved November 24, 2022.

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