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#1 |
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Could we have a clarification on the forum's policy regarding quoting articles please?
[Declaration of interest: I used to run a motorsport website and depended on advertising revenue to make it viable.] I've always been careful to only quote the opening paragraph or two from a story, or lift a quote which is directly relevant to the point; accompanying my post with a direct link to the original source. I've recently noticed a trend (from one member in particular if I'm honest) to cut and paste entire articles, thereby removing any incentive for an interested reader to ever visit the website of the publisher. I know that some countries have a "fair use" defence (the UK certainly doesn't), but I would suggest that the wholesale lifting of articles is copyright theft - even if one is careful to credit the author - and deprives websites of a potential audience. I'd be interested to know the forum's official policy on this. I've cross-posted in F1 becuase that's where I witness this activity the most. ![]() |
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#2 |
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Could we have a clarification on the forum's policy regarding quoting articles please? ![]() |
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#3 |
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that is a good point
http://www.englishclub.com/writing/plagiarism.htm Do you plagiarize? Plagiarism is an illegal form of copying. It means taking another person's work (without asking) and calling it your own. Plagiarism can be accidental or intentional. Copying an entire essay or story and calling it your own is plagiarism. Copying one sentence word-for-word without "quotations" is also plagiarism. Whether you hand it in to a teacher, or post it in your blog, plagiarism is against the law in most nations. Examples of plagiarism
http://www.imagehotlinking.com/ Image Hotlinking (also known as leeching, or inline linking) is the practice of stealing bandwidth from other websites, by linking to an image stored on another server. By doing this, when a person visits a website with hotlinked images, the images must be downloaded from the other server, costing that server bandwidth, instead of the server being visited. This practice can lead to gigabytes of bandwidth being "leeched" from other websites, with no benefit to themselves in return. Am I Hotlinking Someone Else's Image? It is quite possible that people new to webpages may be engaging in the practice of image hotlinking without realizing it. The best way to determine if you are image hotlinking is to look at the image code: ![]() If the image is coming from a site that isn't yours, it's considered hotlinking or inline linking. To solve this, save a copy of the image yourself (assuming you have permission to do so), upload it to your web server, and link to it from there. Alternatively, you can upload it to the numerous free image hosting sites available around the net. |
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#4 |
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A while ago we posted a note, were we asked members to not to post entire articles, but only a single line, followed by a link of the web-site the articles were taken from. Unfortunatelly some members have forgotten that, but that is our policy in here, and from now on I will do my best to make sure everyone will respect that.
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#6 |
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#7 |
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I realize you were just being facetious about copying links, but in the realm of scholarship, copying common definitions published online isn't construed as plagiarism--only copying someone else's ideas / commentary and passing them off as your own. |
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#8 |
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I just realised something funny Copying one sentence word-for-word without "quotations" is also plagiarism. ? |
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