Working in academia and the information sciences, plagiarism and academic cheating are a real concern. This form of creating inaccurate information is not only intentionally misleading, but in academic institutions, it is considered dishonesty and/or fraud and comes with serious consequences.
We have ways to test now for replication of information from other sources, however one form of "trickier" plagiarism which I have had recent experience with, thanks to one of my students, is writing a piece that includes citations to non-existent or inaccurate information about sources (TurnItIn, 2015). Often referred to as the “Misinformer”, this type of writer provides inaccurate information regarding the sources, making it impossible to find them... hence resulting in this error message:
- TurnitIn
- iThenticate
- Plagiarism Detector
- Duplichecker (a free, online checker)
Are 404 Errors always intentional misinformation? No.
In some cases, it can be a simple case of using an URL as a reference. If that website then gets reorganized or the URL no longer functions, it will show up as a 404 Error. What is important is that although this may be unintentional, the URL is not a permanent identifier (Singh, 2015). If the citation can't be found, the information can't be verified.
This recent New York Times article about understanding plagiarism in the digital age gives some good examples of plagiarism as well as information on how to teach methods to avoid inadvertent plagiarism to students.
This recent New York Times article about understanding plagiarism in the digital age gives some good examples of plagiarism as well as information on how to teach methods to avoid inadvertent plagiarism to students.
1. What techniques for verifying the accuracy of information that we have looked at so far could work for determining 404 Errors?
2. Can you think of an example of this type of inaccurate information in current events?
3. Have you ever suspected a piece of information of this type of misinformation?
4. Do you think plagiarism, specifically 404 Errors, are more prevalent now, or simply easier to detect?
5. Can you think of a better way to permanently link to URLS to avoid unintentional 404 Errors?
6. What other examples are there for 404 Errors that may lead to unintentionally inaccurate information?
References:
- Boilerplate (2015). http://www.bigredhair.com/boilerplate/intro.html
- Masic, I. (2014). Plagiarism in scientific research and publications and how to prevent it. Materia socio-medica, 26(2), 141.
- MSNBC. (2015). Fiorina Defends Citing Nonexistent Abortion Video. http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/fiorina-defends-citing-nonexistent-abortion-video
- New York Times (2015). Skills and Strategies: Understanding Plagiarism in the Digital Age. http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/10/29/skills-and-strategies-understanding-plagiarism-in-a-digital-age/?partner=rss&emc=rss&_r=
- Singh, B. P., Ram, M., & Satsangi, A. K. (2015). Plagiarism Detection Service: Its Benefits and Challenges for Academicians and Researchers. Transforming Dimension of IPR: Challenges for New Age Libraries, 227.
- TurnItIn. (2015). Examples of Plagiarism. http://www.citadel.edu/root/images/Plagiarism/examples-from-turnitin.pdf
- Wikipedia. (2015). List of Plagiarism Incidents https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plagiarism_incidents



