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Are You an Unwitting Plagiarist?

Find Out What it is, What Vocal Wants, How You Can Check Content, and How to Properly Credit Content Owners

By Judey Kalchik Published about a year ago 4 min read
Top Story - August 2023
https://pixabay.com/users/evaggelou-31370819/

"Plagiarism is essentially defined as the use of someone else's content without giving them their due credit."- InstaText

Plagiarism is also against Vocal's Community Guidelines.

What Was That All About?

The information above is both factual and attributed. I attributed it in several ways, including quotations, stating the source, and linking the source.

Attributing the source of content used within your own creation is required. Not including it is plagiarism. This piece will contain selected information obtained from several sources; this is one that I found most useful and recommend for additional comprehensive information.

Attribution isn't just required, it is also the right thing to do AND has SEO benefits for you! This article will cover plagiarism, attribution, Vocal requirements, and some online tools.

Plagiarism

"There's nothing new under the sun, but there are lots of old things we don't know."- Ambrose Bierce

Most plagiarism that I've seen on Vocal and other platforms fall into one of the following two types: Direct and Mosaic (aka patchwork plagiarism).

Plagiarism can be DIRECT: copying and pasting something and affixing your name to it. (Example: I saw the script of Frozen on Vocal, presented by a creator into the Fiction Community. It included both stage direction and stage movements. I also saw a full Robert Frost poem with a Vocal creator's name on it. Both examples are longer on the Vocal platform.)

Plagiarism can be MOSAIC or Patchwork: changing a few words/names/places and surrounding work by someone else with a little bit of your work. Unless you are familiar with the work (and in some cases you actually see your OWN work being used!) this can be hard to detect. It is also distressingly easy for people to do, so read on for ways not to fall into the Mosaic plagiarism trap!

Attributions= Giving Credit Where Credit is Due

There are plenty of ways to attribute

  • content that inspired you
  • that wrote the words you insert into your work
  • that sparked your idea
  • that can give additional context to your work

My personal rule of thumb is to use the Vocal 'quote' tool to highlight content if it is just a few lines or paragraph. Then I either call out who created the content leading into the highlighted content, or within it as I did with the Ambrose Bierce quote above. Follow these directions and the image below to create a block quote for that type of quoting attribution:

  1. Type the text, the left click and highlight the text.
  2. Click on the quotation marks (see below) and the words will become italicized and have the line to the left of the words.
author's screen shot showing a quote-in-progress

For more extensive content, such as referring to Vocal's Community Guidelines, I briefly introduce it and then embed a link.

If I am simply referring to content, I'll add a hyperlink to the words I use, as I do below when referring to Vocal's Community Guidelines.

Vocal's Original Content Requirements

Vocal's Community Guidelines calls out the expectations regarding original content. Specifically:

  1. You can use content you've written yourself and previously posted elsewhere. (Example: cross posting your own Substack or Medium content on Vocal. Pro Tip- it's good form to state within the content or as a note at the end that it was originally posted elsewhere by YOU.)
  2. You can critique or parody content written by someone else, providing proper attribution and following the Fair Use Doctrine. (Example- this would be used, perhaps, when you create content for the new Book Club Community).
  3. Even if you do properly attribute (and I KNOW you will!), you must have at least 50% of the story/content your OWN work. (Example: you couldn't make a poem with the majority of the content excerpts from favorite poets, just switched around in a new order of your devising. Although now that I have typed that out it DOES seem like a pretty cool idea! In order to make that work you would need to add an explanation that could include why you did it, how you thought of it, why you think it's interesting, etc.)

Online Tools

Vocal announced via the Creator Discord channels that they are implementing tools to reduce the amount of spam and plagiarism. It's likely that the tools will need to be calibrated and tweaked during that process, and the eventual result will be less spammy content crowding out actual Creator content on the site.

If you find content that you suspect to be plagiarized there are tools online to assist you. Here are a few:

~

I see non-attributed AI AND AI-generated material that makes up the majority of a story/article/poem as plagiarism! It's using created content that the Vocal member did not write and passing it off as their own work. Here's what I do about it:

While you’re here, please do one or all of the following!

1. Leave a comment and share your thoughts. Did you find something new here regarding plagiarism? Have you used the Vocal Discord channel to report plagiarism? Did you know you can report plagiarism to Vocal by using THIS Google form?

2. Click on the little heart to let me know that this clicked with you.

3. Click on the subscribe button and get a FREE notification when my next post goes live.

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You can also find me on Medium.

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About the Creator

Judey Kalchik

It's my time to find and use my voice.

Poetry, short stories, memories, and a lot of things I think and wish I'd known a long time ago.

You can also find me on Medium

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Comments (21)

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  • Dr. Jason Benskin2 months ago

    Congrats on TS

  • Rick Henry Christopher about a year ago

    Very well written and informative!!! Great job Judey!!!

  • Sarah Dabout a year ago

    Well we all Plaigiarize a little, specially when doing properly researched articles. Read mine too? https://vocal.media/fiction/an-irrevocable-dream-about-a-mermaid

  • Alexander McEvoyabout a year ago

    Plagiarism is terrible I hate the idea that some people steal work like this and then try to pass themselves off as genuine creators. I don’t think I’ve seen any plagiarized content on here yet, and for that I count myself lucky. Very useful essay and congrats on top story!

  • Lana V Lynxabout a year ago

    Hi Judey, this is really important and thank you for putting this together. I teach communication ethics in college and am surprised every time that this needs to be put out there for educated adults who are in the business of writing. One note, though: strictly speaking, using AI-generated content is not plagiarism because AI has no feelings and you are not hurting it by using its content. It is essentially cheating on your own consciousness and betraying expectations of others that you would produce only original or properly attributed work.

  • Babs Iversonabout a year ago

    Fabulous advice!!! Congratulations on Top Story!!!❤️❤️💕

  • Maggie Elizabeth about a year ago

    This is so important! Thank you for spreading the good word and providing resources!

  • Jay Kantorabout a year ago

    Someone named - Dheeraj - just posted my 'Popsicle' verbatim in Humor as his own - so blatantly - This need to stop - can you help?

  • Naveed Ahmed Syedabout a year ago

    Attribution isn't just required, it is also the right thing to do AND has SEO benefits for you! 🌟

  • Gerald Holmesabout a year ago

    Thank you Judey. Very informative and easy to follow. Congrats on the Top Story.

  • Alex H Mittelman about a year ago

    I invented a new word today: plagiarism!

  • Thavien Yliasterabout a year ago

    Goodness, if plagairism's this bad then Vocal might as well just incorporate Purdue Owl's citation program just so people can properly cite work. On a different note, when it comes to the works of Robert Frost I commented on someone's post that they stole his poem, and the person replied, "I didn't steal this poem. I have the Author's name and the poems title placed within the subtitle." That's not how that works. I swear most adults are so willingly ignorant to basic rules until they receive some form of negative consequences that they're just ego-centric children walking around in grown up bodies. Still, unless people have explicit, direct, permission from an author to use one's entire work like that, and they can prove it too, the theft needs to be addressed as it is.

  • Emily Marie Concannonabout a year ago

    very informative :)

  • Cathy holmesabout a year ago

    Good article. Thanks for always keeping us informed. Congrats on the TS

  • Oneg In The Arcticabout a year ago

    Very well written! I don't know how Vocal doesn't just hire you to do it all lol

  • Great information & well-written once again, Judey.

  • Lilly Cooperabout a year ago

    A helpful resource :) it is so frustrating after putting hours to create something we are so proud of to see others using a program to plagerise and generate submissions or just copying our work. Articles like this one brings awareness to our own behaviour as much as that of other people and is very useful. Well written!

  • Natalie Wilkinsonabout a year ago

    Thanks for explaining how to use the quotes tool. I’ve gotten good at hyperlinks, and for one or two articles that needed it I attached links to source materials at the bottom. I always report spam when I see it. Usually it is an ad pasted into a comment section, but once it was an obvious ad that made it into the “Poets” community as a story. I’ve seen several authors online complain about their work being lifted and posted under someone else’s name with a new title. (Insert name calling here). I don’t know how you can protect yourself from that. It helps that Vocal and Medium date stamp everything so at least it’s provable.

  • Jason Ray Morton about a year ago

    This is gold. I'd say they do have some tweaking to do. I wrote a story that took two days to get them to realize it was fiction that my "warped" imagination created and not AI. I'm not really sure what spam issues there are, considering it's a content site. Do you know?

  • J. Delaney-Howeabout a year ago

    Thanks for this! I've always linked any info I used from another source right to that source. I'd love to pick your brain some more about this because I do research for a lot of my articles.

  • Kendall Defoe about a year ago

    We have to be more diligent at work with AI and our students' indifference to doing any real work. Thank you for this.

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