enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Copyleaks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyleaks

    Copyleaks is a plagiarism detection platform that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to identify similar and identical content across various formats. [1] [2]Copyleaks was founded in 2015 by Alon Yamin and Yehonatan Bitton, software developers working with text analysis, AI, machine learning, and other cutting-edge technologies.

  3. Wikipedia:Copying text from other sources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Copying_text...

    As a general rule, do not copy text from other sources. Doing so usually constitutes both a copyright violation and plagiarism (exceptions are discussed below). This general rule includes copying material from websites of charity or non-profit organizations, educational, scholarly and news publications, and all sources without a copyright notice.

  4. GPTZero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPTZero

    GPTZero uses qualities it terms perplexity and burstiness to attempt determining if a passage was written by a AI. [14] According to the company, perplexity is how random the text in the sentence is, and whether the way the sentence is constructed is unusual or "surprising" for the application.

  5. Paraphrasing of copyrighted material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraphrasing_of...

    Porter: (a) whether copying occurred (as opposed to independent creation), and (b) whether the copying amounts to an "improper appropriation", meaning that enough of the author's protected expression (and not unprotected ideas) was copied to give rise to a "substantial similarity" between the original work and the putative copy.

  6. Plagiarism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plagiarism

    Reverse plagiarism, or attribution without copying, ... about the impact of artificial intelligence on writing and plagiarism. One such innovation is the GPT-2 model ...

  7. Content similarity detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_similarity_detection

    Citation-based plagiarism detection (CbPD) [26] relies on citation analysis, and is the only approach to plagiarism detection that does not rely on the textual similarity. [27] CbPD examines the citation and reference information in texts to identify similar patterns in the citation sequences. As such, this approach is suitable for scientific ...

  8. Substantial similarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantial_similarity

    Substantial similarity is the term used by all courts to describe, once copying has been established, the threshold where that copying wrongfully appropriates the plaintiff's protected expression. It is found when similarity between the copyrightable elements of two works rises above the de minimis exception, reaching a threshold that is ...

  9. Wikipedia:WikiProject WikiFundi Content/Help:Plagiarism and ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    Because everyone can use it, copy it, and re-use it freely, it can't contain restricted, copyrighted material. You probably know that copying-and-pasting from a book or website and claiming it as your own work is plagiarism. That's the most egregious example, but it isn't the only one. The stakes of plagiarism are high.