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Students Settle With TurnItIn In Copyright Case

An anonymous reader writes "With the deadline for a Supreme Court appeal rapidly approaching, the students who sued TurnItIn.com for issues surrounding copyright infringement reached a settlement with the site's company on Friday. Now the search goes out for any student who has a paper which is being held by TurnItIn that they did not upload themselves. If your teacher uploaded a paper and ran a TurnItIn report without your permission, I bet the students' attorney would like to hear from you."

3 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. Classic Moment from the Appeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One of my favorite points in the Appeal was when Mr. Vanderhye made a point about the security of TurnItIn.

    I can't quote it exactly... but when he made the point, nearly EVERY head nodded, including the three appellate judges. It was one of those made-for-TV moments. This was right around the time of the US Presidential election:

    something like "You can bet if Barack Obama's or Sarah Palin's high school papers were stored on the *most secure server* on the internet, they would have been hacked. There's no doubt that a site with the lax security of TurnItIn would be hacked."

    Man, ya shoulda been there!

  2. Totally Unfair! by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Copyright law is supposed to protect corporations from potential customers. It is not meant to be used to protect authors from corporations. This is a perfectly honest corporation advancing its agenda by innocently infringing the copyright of authors. Corporations are supposed to get unequal protection under the law. How this court could see fit to apply the law equally in this case is beyond me.
     
    /sarcasm

  3. Re:Talk to your professor, opt out by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    they had no issue with me opting out

    You do not have to, and should not have to, opt out of your creative works being infringed.

    The only reason that they used it was because the department head dictated it.

    If the department dictated that the professor should take your laptop, sell it on eBay, and give the money to some third party corporation, would you see the professor as having done no wrong? This corporation is building its cashflow on your creative work, without license. If they want to come to you and negotiate a deal to use your creative work in their business model, fine. Until then, it is yours.