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Conference Board Admits Plagiarism, Pulls Copyright Report

An anonymous reader writes "The Conference Board of Canada has withdrawn all three reports on intellectual property after allegations this week by Michael Geist of plagiarism. The organization now admits that its report on copyright was plagiarized from US copyright lobby groups."

13 of 60 comments (clear)

  1. Internal Review FTW!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Had these reports been subject to "Internal Review", they never would have been released. What they really meant to say was: "We look like money grabbing hypocritical lobby group puppets and need to do some damage control before our reputation is permanently scarred." Yeah... thats what they *really* meant to say. I work at a company where all externally released documents are subject to internal review. That means that before the document can be released, at least 2 other people are required to review the document and sign off on it before it is released. The author and reviewers names are on the cover, and their signatures are captured and stored in a tracking system to show that they approved the documents. *Thats* an internal review process. To say that the Conf. Board of Canada did an internal review? Thats utterly laughable.

    Good work Mr. Geist for spotting this and stepping on it very early.

  2. Canada has a blacklist? by Piata · · Score: 3, Informative

    First I've heard of it. I've never had troubles accessing any site ever. This article seems a little bias when you consider how much more liberal Canadian laws are in the use of our internet and information technology in general. (i.e. we don't have a DMCA)

    1. Re:Canada has a blacklist? by nattt · · Score: 4, Informative

      But Canada does not have fair use, but instead fair dealing which is a lot less liberal than the USA's fair use.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    2. Re:Canada has a blacklist? by Sj0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yeah, but due to the law of unintended consequences, Canada has incredibly liberal copyright laws thanks to earlier lobbying efforts by the music and movie industries.

      --
      It's been a long time.
  3. Re:LMAO by Jurily · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And pure irony on the part of the article!

    I, for one, will mention this incident whenever the topic moves to copyright infringement. They lost the moral high ground too, now.

  4. What this doesn't say... by revjtanton · · Score: 3, Informative

    Is that the Canadian's downloaded the plagiarized reports via BitTorrent.

  5. not much to say by hurfy · · Score: 4, Funny

    I, for one, am speechless....maybe they should have been too.....

  6. Seriously??? by TbB_thund3rp33l · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously Conference Board of Canada, seriously? Did they think that people wouldn't check up on this??

  7. Crime and Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ok... the title above is obviously lifted, but it comes very handy and no longer under copyright protection, hopefully.

    Let's see then the story here:

    1) US copyright groups want to send people to jail in the US and around the world for downloading music, etc. for their own listening, viewing, etc. pleasure.

    2) Conference Board of Canada was downloading documents from US copyright lobby groups, lifted them partially into a paid, for profit report to support the Canadian government to formulate laws, reflecting the interests of US copyright lobby groups.

    3) How about feeding the US lobby groups recommended medicine to Conference Board of Canada as a test? Suing the hell out of the Conference Board of Canada? Demanding jail term for the head of the organization?

    4) How about commissioning a report, on how US copyright lobby groups are influencing or directly rig the legislation process in other countries?

  8. Re:Too bad they weren't the PirateBay by gujo-odori · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, no, they couldn't. Plagiarism is taking someone else's original work, either in whole or in part, and purporting that it is your own original work. A small example of this is using an attributed quote in a paper and not identifying it as a quote.

    A large example is copying your entire paper from someone else, putting your name on it, and submitting it as yours.

    Note that plagiarism with permission is still plagiarism. If your friend gives you his term paper from last year and you turn it in as yours, that's still plagiarism. If you do it without permission, it may also be a copyright violation.

  9. Letter to Conference Board of Canada by TropicalCoder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Under their retraction they provide a contact link. I clicked on that link and gave them my thoughts as pasted below, and the acknowledgement promises a response. Will get back to you on upon their reply.

    Dear Sir/Madam,

    After almost selling out Canada to the USA via your plagiarized reports on intellectual property, I would strongly suggest that you contract Prof. Michael Geist or at least work closely with him in the next effort. Michael is well know, extremely knowledgeable on the subject, and trusted by a large number of Canadians. Only in this way will you regain the prestige you once had.

    Sincerely,

    ...

  10. Re:LMAO by Faylone · · Score: 3, Interesting
  11. Re:LMAO by Jurily · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's not the first time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Copyright

    I love the double standard: when we do it, we're filthy thieving pirates, if they do it, it's "just an oversight".