How to Detect and Stop Article Plagiarism
74Stopping plagiarism seems to be impossible through protective methods
of defence. The only methods available are reactive, but at least there
are such methods and you can be kept aware if your articles have been
plagiarized. You can then do something about it and have the offending
material removed.
Using Javascript
I
mentioned defensive methods of protecting your original content from
being copied. There are numerous code snippets, largely written in
Javascript, that can be inserted into you webpages and thereby disable
many browser and mouse functions. Such scripts can stop the highlight
and copy commands, they can disable the right mouse button and thereby
avoid the context menu popping up and various other features. However,
a determined plagiarist will have no problems getting around such basic
defences:switching off javascript in the browser being the most
obvious. It is also likely to irritate other normal users who may
suddenly wonder why they can no longer do such simple navigation tasks
such as opening a link in a new tab. The nature of the internet is that
as soon as a person lands on your webpage all the information they need
will be cached.
Copyscape
Copyscape is
a service that protects writers and content buyers from plagiarism.
There is a free service that lets you input one of your article web
pages and Copyscape searches to see if there are any similar pages in
existence. However, the rest of their services require payment. Their
Premium service allows searches for blocks of text before online
publication as well as a tracking system so you can keep tabs on any
copyright infringements that require your response. You can also filter
results to avoid flagging up copies that you are posting to article
directory websites. As of writing this service costs what seems a low 5
cents per search, but if you have 100 articles that comes to $5, and if
you are checking them every month that can soon start to add up.
The alternative is to use their CopySentry services
which automatically check for plagiarism on either a daily or weekly
basis. This service starts at $4.95 a month for 10 pages plus $0.25 for
any additional pages. This seems poor value compared to their standard
5 cents a page but useful if you don't know how to automate their API.
One interesting thing is being able to set the sensitivity of the
searches and find pages even if they have been slightly edited.
Given
the costs involved in using Copyscape I suspect that the service is not
so much for writers but for buyers of written content. For example, Constant Content
uses Copyscape on their site and this makes sense as it gives buyers
confidence that an article they are paying for is genuinely original. A
buyer can very quickly check if the article appears elsewhere and they
may be less interested in it being copied in the future. As a corporate
expense it may be justified but for the freelance writer it seems to me
expensive considering there is an almost identical service for free.
Google Alerts
Google Alerts
is a new service, still in beta, that will search for a string of
characters as it crawls the net and send you an email alert whenever a
page is found that includes a matching string. This means you can enter
any long unique string from one of your articles and let Google do the
same as Copyscape but for free. You can decide on how often to be
informed, either once a day, once a week or as it happens. Google will
then either send you an email or you can add the alert to a feed and
view it in your favourite feed reader.
For the struggling online
freelance writer this strikes me as a better option. You won't be able
to input the whole text but Google accepts a maximum of 2048 characters
in its search queries. This means try to pick fairly long sentences
with what seem to be a unique combination of words. Remember to put the
whole string in quotation marks otherwise it will search for the
occurrences of each word anywhere in the document, rather than the
words in the order written. If you start getting too many false flag
alerts then you can just go into your Alerts account and edit the
string of text. You can also use Google's Advanced Search features but
you must then copy the whole query include the advanced tags from the
Google search box into your Alerts search.
Watermaking Text
Watermarking
of images and documents is a common way to embed a copyright notice
that is almost impossible to remove. Indeed, adding a text watermark to
an image means that anybody copying it will actually be giving you some
free advertising. But watermarking text – plain text rather than a
document such as Word – is very difficult. The very nature of plain
text means that trying to embed any other kind of code can easily be
traced and removed by any determined plagiarist. For example, there are
scripts to embed invisible Unicode characters into the blank spaces
between words. However, I think most writers want to concentrate on
their writing and have a method that is both simple to implement as
well as simple to check if and when an article has been copied.
Look
at this phrase: iťs оnly a simрle methоd. It looks ordinary enough, but
copy and paste it into your wordprocessor. Notice anything strange? If
you have an automatic spell checker switched on you will notice that
nearly the whole phrase is flagged as incorrectly spelt. It looks
perfectly ordinary, can be copied and pasted and still look perfectly
ordinary, but some of the characters used are from the extended
character set. The would-be plagiarist notices nothing out of the
ordinary but you can now use Google Alerts to warn you if this phrase
is ever used again.
The advantage of this method over simply
using Google Alerts for every article is that you can generate maybe
half a dozen key phrases using non-standard characters and not worry
about adding a new Alert phrase every time you post a new piece of
writing. The key phrases can also be relatively short and common
instead of looking for long unique phrases for each article. This
obviously won't stop the plagiarist but it will alert you to when it
happens.
And Finally
As
we've seen trying to lock your precious articles away from thieving
plagiarists just doesn't work. The open nature of the internet means
that many things, apart from your articles, are open to abuse. There
are, however, ways of keeping track of your original content and
keeping informed about any acts of plagiarism. Getting the offending
content removes requires a number of official letters stating your
claim of copyright. These steps will be left for another article.
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CommentsLoading...
This is a very excellent hub! I especially liked the text watermarking idea.
From a brief look into this, it does not seem like there are that many finished tools that allow you to do this automatically. Most of the articles I found were academic papers. I think I must be missing something, and not using the proper search terms.
If there are particular text watermarking tools you can recommend I would be greatly appreciative. Thanks!









Hawkesdream Level 2 Commenter 3 years ago
I do like the sound information that you give in your hubs,very useful indeed. Just a question can ideas be classed as plagiarism?