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  2. iThenticate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ithenticate

    CrossCheck Powered by iThenticate is a re-branded version of the iThenticate service developed in partnership with CrossRef, a community of notable scientific, technical, and medical publishers. CrossCheck received the Association for Learned and Professional Society Publishers Award for Publishing Innovation in 2008.

  3. Comparison of anti-plagiarism software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_anti...

    iThenticate: iParadigms 2004 2017 proprietary: SaaS: Latin PlagScan: PlagScan GmbH 2008 limited SaaS, On-Premises [6] Latin, Cyrillic & Arabic [7] [8] Submissions are checked against (public) online documents, a (private) shared repository, and the user's own (private) repository. [9] PlagTracker: Devellar 2011 freemium: SaaS: Latin, Cyrillic

  4. Content similarity detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_similarity_detection

    Systems for text similarity detection implement one of two generic detection approaches, one being external, the other being intrinsic. [5] External detection systems compare a suspicious document with a reference collection, which is a set of documents assumed to be genuine. [6]

  5. Crossref - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossref

    Crossref is a nonprofit association of approximately 19,000 voting members made up of 6,000 societies and publishers, including both commercial and nonprofit organizations, 6,500 academic and research institutions, research funders, museums, repositories, government agencies and NGOs.

  6. Turnitin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnitin

    Turnitin (stylized as turnitin) is an Internet-based similarity detection service run by the American company Turnitin, LLC, a subsidiary of Advance Publications. Founded in 1998, it sells its licenses to universities and high schools who then use the software as a service (SaaS) website to check submitted documents against its database and the ...

  7. Substantial similarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantial_similarity

    Direct evidence of actual copying by a defendant rarely exists, so plaintiffs must often resort to indirectly proving copying. [1] [page needed] Typically, this is done by first showing that the defendant had access to the plaintiff's work and that the degree of similarity between the two works is so striking or substantial that the similarity could only have been caused by copying, and not ...

  8. Similarity learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Similarity_learning

    Similarity learning is an area of supervised machine learning in artificial intelligence. It is closely related to regression and classification , but the goal is to learn a similarity function that measures how similar or related two objects are.

  9. Wikipedia:Turnitin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Turnitin

    Turnitin checks and archives millions of papers and uses its database and algorithms to identify plagiarized material. [1]Submissions are compared to over 17 billion web pages, 200 million student papers, and over 100 million additional articles from content publishers, including library databases, text-books, digital reference collections, subscription-based publications, homework helper ...