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Ideas are important in plagiarism, although not in copyright. If a student writes an essay using an idea borrowed from an article, even if they re-write the idea in their own words, they are guilty of plagiarism. In contrast , ideas and facts are not protected by copyright. A writer can quote the facts and ideas – and even use them – from another publication, so long as the source of the facts and ideas are properly cited.

  • How did “Turnitin.com” become the subject of a copyright lawsuit?

Turnitin.com is a teaching aid and plagiarism detection program. A university (or high school) can subscribe to it to help their students learn to write correctly, and to help catch habitual plagiarists. (Turn It In 2011) Turnitin.com owns a large database of student and professional writing. A student’s paper is submitted to Turnitin.com and then compared with its database. The student (or instructor) receives the paper with “potentially infringing” phrases and paragraphs highlighted. If this program is used during the creation stages of an assignment, it can be very helpful for teaching students how to use outside sources properly.

A point of contention about Turnitin.com is that it keeps a copy of every essay submitted to it. The student who wrote the paper – and who owns the copyright to it – rarely has a choice in the matter. Either they let their paper become part of the Turnitin.com database, or they fail the course. “Consent” in such a situation is not freely given.

In 2007, four high school students brought suit against Turnitin.com, claiming copyright infringement of their work. They also claimed that that online contract (with Turnitin.com) was invalid because they were minors at the time and signed (or clicked) it under duress. A Federal Court judge decided the case in favor of Turnitin.com. He cited five previous cases upholding the legality of click-through licensing, and ruled that the use of the student’s papers by Turnitin.com was “highly transformational” and therefore not in violation of Fair Use (Dames 2008, 23-25).

Debates about the use of Turnitin.com continue in high schools and universities. It is a controversial response to a well-known problem in academic settings.

  • Conclusion

What was Zach guilty of? By the description given, it seems that he wrote too quickly and referred to his sources so often that he – intentionally or otherwise – used the same words and sentences as his source throughout his submitted paper. Be forewarned as you complete your written assignments!

Scenarios

Scenario 1) Elizabeth, a busy reporter for the New York Times, needs to get a story submitted ASAP. She checked the Internet for resources (her usual practice) and found an article almost exactly on her topic. She “cleaned up” the opening paragraph and submitted it for publication. Has Elizabeth committed plagiarism?

Scenario 2) Rob had arranged a medley of songs for a special performance. He needed “transition music” to go between them. He played different chord arrangements on his guitar for a while, then settled on one that seemed familiar. It was just right for the setting, so he used it. Later that week, he heard the same chord sequence in an older pop song. Has Rob committed plagiarism?

Scenario 3) Cindy had to do a “descriptive essay” for a class, which was her absolute least favorite assignment. She found a printed encyclopedia on the topic and “semi-copied” the information in the article. In other words, she copied some parts and paraphrased others. She figured that there was nothing original in a descriptive essay anyway, so it was OK to do this. Did Cindy commit plagiarism?

Scenario 4) Dr. Smith has assigned her students to create bibliographies on the class topic for years. She has photocopied the best of them, and since computers became popular, has saved them on her hard drive. After 22 years, she published her own bibliography on the same topic. Many former students looked up their entries, and found them included, letter by letter. The former students approached a lawyer about suing for copyright infringement or plagiarism, but the lawyer refused to take the case. Why?

Bibliography

Chapter 11: Plagiarism

Council of Writing Program Administrators. "Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practices." Council of Writing Program Administrators 2011, (External Link) .

Dames, K. Matthew. "Turn You in: Scholarly Ethics in a Culture of Suspicion." Information Today (6-2008, 2008): 23-25.

Stolley, Karl and Brizee, Allen. "Avoiding Plagiarism." Purdue Online Writing Lab 2011, (External Link) .

Turn It In. "Turnitin.Com." 2011, (External Link) .

Vaughan Memorial Library. "You Quote it, You Note it." Acadia University, Vaughan Memorial Library 2010, (External Link) .

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Source:  OpenStax, Copyright for the rest of us. OpenStax CNX. Dec 15, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11385/1.2
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