In Argentina, Law Against Plagiarism Plagiarized
An anonymous reader writes "An Argentinian politician who introduced a law to send plagiarists to jail for three to eight years appears to have plagiarized the explanation of his bill directly from Wikipedia. The bulk of his explanation is three paragraphs that are taken, verbatim, from Wikipedia, without acknowledgment."
Do as I say don't do as I do, some politicians outside of Argentina also have that attitude ;-)
Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
Oh pleaaaaaaaaaaase enforce the penalty!
crazy dynamite monkey
Same ole' crap. "Stop stealing," says the thief.
"Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
So should you...
Plagiarism is not illegal in and of itself, except for where it's fraudulent
Plagiarism is always fraudulent. Its taking credit for work you did not do.
If we have rules for intellectual property, we should have them for intellectual fraud too.
Even in the "real world", where it should be (and is) perfectly fine to use someone elses work to solve a problem its still wrong to take credit for it.
Avoiding plagiarism doesn't mean you can't copy. It just means you can't take credit when you do.
Avoiding plagiarism is as simple as crediting the source.
RTFA
Nope. This story is indeed ironic. I'm sick and tired of people like you who think that there's NEVER a case where the word "ironic" should be used.
From Princeton wordnet: "Irony: incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs"
This is ironic. Alanis Morissette may have ruined it in most situations, but it gets the okay here.
Maybe he wrote the article?
If we have rules for intellectual property, we should have them for intellectual fraud too.
I disagree. Plagiarism is morally wrong, but that doesn't mean it has to be illegal. There are lots of things that are morally wrong but not illegal (e.g. cheating on your spouse). That's the way it should be: for the vast majority of things, social norms and consequences (including public outcry, shaming, damage to reputation, etc.) are more than sufficient. Laws should only be enacted in those rare cases where the public safety or public good needs more protection. To do otherwise gives the lawmakers/enforcers too much power, and tends to turn every person into a criminal. (Does it really make sense to prosecute a college student who cheats on an essay? Or is flunking him sufficient?)
Really, we have far too many laws at present, and could stand to have many repealed. (The various "intellectual property" laws could certainly stand to be pruned-down, for instance.) I see no pressing social need for plagiarism to be illegal. (Plagiarism may be part of some larger fraud, but in those cases there are already other good laws (anti-fraud, truth-in-advertising, etc.) to address the real transgression.)
AH, I realize you're being trollish in expressing your opinion. And I don't usually feed the trolls, but here I go anyways.
The XKCD comic on Malamanteau is funny for the exact reason you don't get it. You (yes you) and others like you are what make it funny.
You see, the comic is a joke on you. It wasn't funny in its outright, it was funny because of all the reaction to it.
The reaction was understood by the author, before it was even penned. The reaction was guaranteed, which is what makes the whole thing so damn funny. All the posturing and preening and asshattery being done in the name of Wankipedia (sic) is part of the joke.
You don't get the joke, because you're on the wrong side of the joke. You probably take this kind of thing way too seriously to realize what I'm saying, which makes the whole thing even funnier than it was just a moment ago.
It is was a perfectly genius stroke of humor. And I'm still laughing ... but mostly at people like you who won't get the joke.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
When I read this article, I immediately thought, what if he edited wikipedia (with a sockpuppet) to coincide with his bill before he introduced it? He can't be said to plagiarize his own text, after all.
The revision history of the article reveals that the current first three paragraphs were written on 19 April 2010 by Andreasmperu, who has been a prolific spanish wikipedia user for some years, is certainly not a sock puppet, is probably a woman, and may be from Peru.
Since I have disposed with the sock puppet theory, I feel comfortable embracing the much more humorous prevailing theory (pleasantly reinforcing my preconceptions about politicians) that Gerónimo Vargas Aignasse did in fact plagiarize the text of his plagiarism bill.