Sunday, January 20, 2008

After reading the article, "Adventures in Cheating" by Seth Stevenson, my knowledge for plagiarism has increased. I did not realize how easy it was to have a paper created to the exact subject matter. The article also made it seem so easy to go through college with out ever having to write anything. Even though it is not smart and you are not learning anything, it's an easy way out if you don't get caught. The article is very informative if your a college student looking for advice on which site to try and get a paper from. It seems to have a wide range to choose from with decent advice. However, what is the point of trying to get an education if your not actually doing the work. Your basically living a huge lie, telling yourself you finished college with decent grades and a diploma and never did any of the work. Plagiarism can be a serious problem, almost like an addiction if someone thinks they can get away with never having to do anything. Yeah papers can be a pain to do, but its only for the better in the long run. It gives you so much more knowledge when you have to research and then apply the material into your own creation. You never know what you might have to do later on in life, you might somehow stumble across a subject that you wrote a research paper on. Well if you actually wrote the paper then you would be in good shape, and remember things but if you never put any work into it then you would be starting all over again like you originally were supposed to in college. Doing your own work is like a building block for your future because you never know what you might run into later on in life.
The second article, "Not That There's Anything Wrong With That" also by Seth Stevenson is more about the technicalities of plagiarism and copyright. Plagiarism is equated with dishonesty while copyright is more from a legal standpoint. However, both are dishonest and completely wrong coming from any ethical point of view. When it comes to recipes, it is understandable to want copyright over them as your own. Its a way to become famous and if everyone else uses them than nothing will ever become of the original creator. I think that Lapine is being a bit over the top insisting that Seinfeld's work was copyrighted because Lapine was not even the first to come up with the idea of sneaking vegi's into kids food. It seems to be much of a jealously deal going on between Lapine and Seinfeld. Basically Seinfeld is getting more publicity for her book that shares the same ideas as Lapine's but the article is trying to reinforce that fact the Seinfeld is a celebrity and Lapine is not.
Basically plagiarism is not a smart thing to do, and your cheating yourself out of knowledge that you can't exactly get back. Sure some people think they won't ever need that knowledge but just about any job in the real word requires some sort of thinking and research or writing.

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