首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
1 White-collar copycats may be less inclined to pilfer the well-chosen words of others now that software designed to ferret out
1 White-collar copycats may be less inclined to pilfer the well-chosen words of others now that software designed to ferret out
admin
2010-01-18
56
问题
1 White-collar copycats may be less inclined to pilfer the well-chosen words of others now that software designed to ferret out plagiarism is moving out of academia and into the business world. For years, educators at colleges and universities have marshaled software tools to ensure that their students’ work is original. Now, tainted by scandals or leery of the Internet’s copy-enabling power, a growing number of newspapers, law firms and other businesses are using data-sifting tools that can cross-check billions of digital documents and swiftly recognize patterns in just seconds.
2 Unlike Google and other search engines that find matches to typed-in key words, an advanced plagiarism detection service such as iParadigms LLC’s makes a digital fingerprint of an entire document and compares it against material on the Internet and in other sources, including proprietary academic and media databases. Even the U. N. Security Council has begun to protect its credibility this way, using iParadigm’s technology since last fall to ensure the originality of reports by its researchers and freelance writers.
3 Oakland, Calif.-based iParadigms started in 1996 with a computer program to help researchers at the University of California, Berkeley inspect undergraduates’ papers. Today, its Turnitin plagiarism-detector is used by about 2,500 high schools and colleges in the United States and 1,000 more abroad. It launched a commercial version, iThenticate, in January.
4 Other plagiarism detection providers, including Glatt Plagiarism Services, MyDropBox LLC, and CFL Software Development also report growing business outside the educational sector. New clients include companies that produce instruction or training materials, attorneys searching for copyright violations, Web sites and police and military agencies that check officers’ applications for promotions.
5 Few of these businesses are willing to talk about using these tools. Many insist that the software makers shield their identities and keep mum about any transgressions that are exposed. Last year, one publisher turned to iParadigms when it investigated and subsequently affirmed rumors that an accomplished textbook author had plagiarized other sources. Sworn to secrecy, iParadigms president John Barrie said he watched in disbelief as the publisher quietly revised later editions, leaving the author’s reputation intact.
6 "But I see a lot of plagiarism everyday," Barrie said. "Most authors, whether a student or professional author, think the odds of being found out are so remote that they’ll play the odds and think they’re just fine."
7 IParadigms charges universities a $ 500 annual licensing fee plus 60 cents per full-timestudent. Business customers pay $1,000 a year and $10 for each page submitted for screening. Newspapers face different charging options based on word count or circulation.
8 A different program, WCopyfinder, was employed by USA Today as it probed the work of its embattled former reporter Jack Kelley. The free program compares strings of words only from preselected documents. IThenticate and MyDropBox, by contrast, are Web-based tools. Users upload documents to the Web sites; the services troll the Internet and other proprietary databases, such as Lexis Nexis or ProQuest, for any sign of unoriginal work; then they produce reports showing matches. IThenticate also combs its archive of Internet pages, which grows by 40 million pages a day.
9 Clearly, plagiarism is a growing problem. In a survey of 30,000 undergraduates at 34 colleges, 37 percent admitted committing cut-and-paste plagiarism using the Internet, up from 10 percent in 1999. Only 20 percent of their professors use plagiarism-detection tools, according to the survey by Rutgers University professor Don McCabe, founder of the Center for Academic Integrity.
10 Plagiarism detectors can be relatively cheap insurance against intellectual property sins, but many businesses and even educators remain reluctant to use them. Some fear lawsuits if they accuse someone of cheating. And deciding what amounts to actual plagiarism remains a judgment call that humans must make, creators of the software say.
According to the passage, plagiarism remains a growing problem largely because________.
选项
A、the plagiarism-detection tools are not powerful enough
B、the violators are smarter than the service providers
C、the violators believe they can run away with their behavior
D、the educators and businesses are too tolerant
答案
C
解析
本题为细节理解题。据第6段可确定。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zAvO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Everygenerationhasitsemblematicboy’stoy.onceuponatimetherewasthegolfcart:alittletoycarspecificallydesigned
A、ItisfoolishtowatchthatmovieonTV.B、IfyoucanseethemovieonTV,whypayforit?C、Youwillaffectotherswhilehavi
Howwelookandhowweappeartoothersprobablyworriesusmorewhenareinourteensorearlytwentiesthanatanyothertime
Howwelookandhowweappeartoothersprobablyworriesusmorewhenareinourteensorearlytwentiesthanatanyothertime
Everygenerationhasitsemblematicboy’stoy.Onceuponatimetherewasthegolfcart:alittletoycarspecificallydesigned
Everygenerationhasitsemblematicboy’stoy.Onceuponatimetherewasthegolfcart:alittletoycarspecificallydesigned
随机试题
弥散性血管内凝血的病因最多见的是
住房公积金财务管理的主要任务:编制住房公积金和管理中心管理费用年度预决算,建立职工住房公积金明细账,记载职工个人住房公积金的缴存、提取等情况;建立健全内部财务制度,做好财务管理工作;降低运作风险,保证住房公积金保值增值,确保住房公积金所有者的合法权益不受侵
背景资料:某图书馆工程,建筑面积45000m2,地下二层,地上二十六层,框架一剪力墙结构。施工过程中,发生了如下事件:事件一:在项目部依据《建设工程项目管理规范》(GB/T50326--2006)编制的项目管理实施规划中,对材料管理等各种资源管理进行了
()是基金投资面临的基金交易对象无力履约而给基金带来的风险。
秘书在接听抱怨电话时,应()。
吴老师觉得自己已经教了十几年书了,不用学什么多媒体教学。你认为吴老师的观点()。
张某的一种产品和一项方法专利被授予专利权,下列哪些情形行为人不承担赔偿责任?()
对其度量的数据可进行积差相关系数计算的量表是
查询比任何一个男生入校总分高的女生的姓名和入校总分。请填空补充下面的SELECT-SQL语句:SELECT姓名,入校总分FROM学生表WHERE【】;(SELECT【】FROM学生WHERE性别=“男”);AND【】/*注意:
A、欣喜B、怀疑C、信任D、商量B
最新回复
(
0
)