Plagarism

Plagiarism is a complex concept that spans a spectrum from inspiration to theft. But is plagiarism strictly black and white? Can it occur unintentionally and can it be considered permissible under certain circumstances? As the rise of generative AI continues, are users inadvertently plagiarising when they use these tools?

In this week’s episode, we discuss plagiarism. We speak about the recent Claudine Gay case, definitions and historical examples of plagiarism, the entropy of plagiarising exact wording, legal concepts that relate to plagiarism such as copyright law, patents and trademark infringement and how generative AI could create new forms of plagiarism. Finally, we share our favourite plagiarism examples.

A few things we mentioned in this podcast:

- Harvard’s Claudine Gay was ousted for ‘plagiarism’. How serious was it really
- Harvard retains President Claudine Gay despite alleged plagiarism on her part
- Entropy and Redundancy in English
- George Harrison Guilty of Plagiarism
- LLMs are definitionally plagiaristic
- Why ChatGPT Can't Plagiarise

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