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Students Sue Anti-Plagiarism Service

jazzbazzfazz writes "It seems that some students in Virginia are not happy with the anti-plagiarism service Turnitin. The company checks prose submitted by its customers for signs that it has been copied in whole or part by comparing it to a large database of works that it maintains. Trouble is, it also adds the submitted prose to its files and stores it for use by the company in future scans, which the students feel is illegal use of their copyrighted materials. I think they've got an excellent case, especially since they seem to have prepared for this eventuality: they're A-students, never been accused of plagiarism, and they formally copyrighted their papers prior to their submission to Turnitin."

3 of 713 comments (clear)

  1. What's good for the goose by fermion · · Score: 0, Troll
    I would go along with the students, as long as the students pay the RIAA 10^x dollars, where x represent the number of songs in their possession that were not specifically bought on the same media on which the students listen to said music. I mean be realistic. If you can take the kind of crap submitted to professors as work worthy of a lawsuit, then J Lo is gold in comparison.

    More seriously, I think these kids need to go to a college that is not concerned about the integrity of their degrees. I suspect that they are many schools that are more interested in money that education, and such schools would not degrade the user experience by utilizing turnitin. I would hope that a competant judge would throw this case out with same predujice as SCO and the RIAA.

    What is next. Some college student using the DCMA to sue youtube for the sex pictures s/he took and posted.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  2. Re:Why woudn't they want their work cataloged by MaelstromX · · Score: 0, Troll

    "why would you want to let other people make money off of deterring cheaters by using your work - without you seeing a penny of the profit".


    Because it's not evil for a company to make money? And without the added value that your paper receives by being in an easily searchable database of millions of texts, it is essentially worthless after you have been graded on it? And because by preventing plagiarism and upholding honesty in academics they are providing a public service, even if, GASP, they are profiting off of it, the same way countless other companies in various fields do?

    If the students are legally in the right, then kudos to them for their upcoming payday. But Slashdot is the last place where I would have expected to see everybody saying copyright owners inherently deserve god-like control of what anyone, anywhere does with their copyrighted works. (this isn't directed at the parent in particular, but at the discussion in general)
  3. Re:Probably not fair use. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 0, Troll

    The moral of the story?

    Don't waste your time and money on university.

    If you're under the age of 50 and weren't born to someone who makes 7 figures a year while playing golf all day, the system is gamed to fuck you from birth to death.

    Don't participate. Start a new game.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth