The Internet: The Dangers Of Plagiarism And The Internet

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Plagiarism has become an increasingly prominent issue in todays society. The internet has changed from an educational aid to an open sea for plagiarism and cyber cheating. It facilitates the unauthorized use of other peoples’ original ideas, essays, quotes, and other original material. Some teachers have even begun to require students to use the web to obtain sources for research papers to familiarize them with the current standards in society. But sometimes what turns into research for a paper can easily become plagiarism by copying a sentence here and there. The internet has become one of the most popular and easiest ways of cheating. Within seconds students can find thousands of free pre-written essays available online, where they copy ideas …show more content…

Some people don’t even realize that they are plagiarizing until a teacher tells them. So what really is plagiarism? According to the dictionary, plagiarism is the practice of taking someone else 's work or ideas and passing them off as one 's own. Cheating and plagiarism comes in several ways; it doesn’t just have to be stealing essays from the internet. It varies from stealing music to copying someone else’s test, texting answers to classmates, or even buying a custom made essay. Students who procrastinate or are simply lazy are the typical customers who pay other people to write an essay for them. Because of the widespread use of the internet, students are now easily able to get a custom essay emailed directly to them without having someone in real life to do the task. Websites such as affordaletermpapers.com make a killing by charging a “minimum of $9.95 per page for a custom written paper. If the paper needs to be written immediately the price jumps to $24.95 per page” (Rawe …show more content…

Turnitin is a plagiarism detection company where everyday students submit their essays that then become stored on the companies’ database. The papers are then compared to over 12 billion web pages, more than 10,000 newspapers, books, and magazines, and every other student paper already in their database. The service then sends the paper back, highlighting the copied/plagiarized portions giving the overall paper a percentage of originality. Schools and Universities subscribe to Turnitins’ service for about 87 cents per student each year (Walsh 621). The company produces tens of millions of dollars each year in revenue because of the high demand to stop and catch plagiarism. Personally, I have had experience with Turnitin.com; my high school subscribed to the service and I submitted my work to it for every essay I wrote. In my experience it was generally pretty helpful to see if the paper was being cited correctly. Teachers would use the percentage of plagiarism that Turnitin gave them along with their own intuition to determine a grade. Many schools use this service, but what they decide to do with the information they receive is entirely up to them. Some schools will fail a student if any plagiarism is found, while other schools use the service as a learning opportunity by teaching the students how to properly cite and quote their sources (Walsh

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