Definition of plagiarism
Giving the definition of plagiarism it is possible to refer to a great number
of sources, explanatory dictionaries and so on. But the heart of the problem
is the same. It is cited in Plagiarism.org:
“In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud.”
And this phrase is true. Any person can be swindled and twisted round a finger,
honest proceedings and transactions can be insolently picked and used. Here
is the definition of plagiarism in few words that makes the picture full. But
all in all plagiarism is the illegal intentional appropriation of authorship
on someone’s work of science, literature or art as a whole or partly.
At the bottom of fact, plagiarism is the violation of any country’s legislation,
copyright statute (Copyright Act) in particular. According to the legislation
people who use plagiarism can be called to criminal liability and this responsibility
is hard to decline as legal investigation is a long-term work. Plagiarism is
acknowledged regardless of somebody else’s work is published or not. Moreover
compulsion to the coauthorship is also prosecuted as plagiarism. A suffering
from plagiarism author can resort to the legal measures of protection of the
broken right for authorship and too demand compensation of damages. If plagiarism
is proved in the work with a publishing contract (agreement), a publishing house
has the right to annul it and exact the paid fee. Borrowing of theme or subject
of work or scientific ideas, or just their constituents without borrowing of
form of their expression is not considered to be plagiarism.
All in all author’s rights should be protected all the time. And it is
vitally important to maintain integrity as it is a part of the modern developing
cultural society.
Works Cited
Plagiarism.org. 2007. What is plagiarism? Retrieved July 16,
2007, from http://www.plagiarism.org/learning_center/what_is_plagiarism.html


