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What is Copyright Infringement

Handbook of Research on Ethics, Entrepreneurship, and Governance in Higher Education
The unauthorized use of any creation protected by copyrights laws, which grant rights to reproduce, distribute, display or perform a work to the copyright holder. All the works published before the twentieth century are now in the public domain.
Published in Chapter:
Plagiarism and Ethical Issues: A Literature Review on Academic Misconduct
Bernard Montoneri (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-5837-8.ch001
Abstract
This chapter discusses the literature on plagiarism and aims at helping readers better understand what plagiarism is, what is at stake, and how to fight intellectual dishonesty. First, it is essential to define plagiarism and to present the historical background related to academic malpractice. Since the advent of the internet, the number of cases of plagiarism has increased exponentially. Many websites overtly encourage acts of cheating and plagiarism, offer or sell programs designed to copy, generate, and even buy assignments and academic papers. The growing number of retracted documents, not only in open access journals but also in journals owned by major publishers, is disturbing. This chapter will notably discuss the rise and thrive of “predatory” publishers, the growth of fake papers, the abuse of fake positive peer review, and the disturbing success of contract cheating. Finally, it should be noted that even though academic malpractice is damaging the reputation of the scientific community, many solutions have been proposed and implemented.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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Plagiarism, Ghostwriting, Boilerplate, and Open Content
A civil legal violation in which one copyrighted work uses information from another copyrighted work without permission of the original author(s), or when some entity improperly copies, performs, or distributes copies of an existing work, either in whole or in part.
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