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Plagiarism, Intellectual Property, and Copyright

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Term
Definition
Plagiarism   The taking of someones work and using it as your own without giving them credit or using correct quotations.  
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How can you best plan your paper?   Decide whether you need to use other sources for information and if so how to include it into your paper.  
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How to take effective notes?   Take notes on your sources to help make sure that you have all of the information collected and organized.  
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How do you correctly paraphrase?   Is when you correctly restate another persons idea or thoughts.  
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How do you make sure your sources are credible?   Start off by making sure the author is credible and therefore his information is credible.  
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What are copyright laws?   They are in place in order to provide protection of peoples intellectual property.  
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Are all published works copyrighted?   No, not necessarily. Phone books, government works, facts that are from original research , and works in the public domain are not copyrighted and are open to the public.  
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Can facts be copyrighted?   Yes, if the facts are originated from individual research.  
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Do you have to source every fact you use?   No, not if the fact originates from unique individual research.  
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Does it matter how much is copied?   Not in the matter of plagiarism.  
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What are academic consequences of plagiarism?   Most colleges and universities have no tolerance for plagiarism and will kick students out if they are caught or at least give them a zero on what they cheated on.  
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What are legal punishments of plagiarism?   They are considered a misdemeanor and you can be fined anywhere from $100 and $50,000 in fines and up to one year in jail.  
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What are institutional punishments of plagiarism?   Most corporations don't tolerate it and many have lost their job over it.  
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Does the intention matter?   No, if plagiarism is committed it doesn't matter why.  
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What goes into the "fair use" ?   The nature of your use, the amount used, and the effect of your usage on the original work.  
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What is public domain?   Works that are no longer copyrighted or never were copyrighted.  
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How do you determine if a work is public domain ?   Typically anything that is 75 years or older is no longer copyrighted but, if you are unsure you should contact your lawyer.  
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What is a citation?   It's a way for the readers of your paper to know you got some of your information from a different source.  
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When do you need to cite?   Whenever you use a quote, paraphrase, or any information from another persons individual work.  
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What is attribution?   Acknowledgment that some of the work came from a different source.  
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What is common knowledge ?   Knowledge that is well known and/or shared by the public.  
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What are endnotes?   Notes at the end of your paper showing the citations for information that was used from a different source.  
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What are footnotes?   Notes on the sides of the paper making references.  
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What is a paraphrase?   Repeated information that isn't said in the same exact way as the original work.  
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What does it mean to be peer reviewed?   It means that peers can review a paper to point out good and bad points in it.  
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