Category Archives: University

University related things.

The duplicity of iParadigms LLC and TurnItIn

I am a careful writer.  Not in the sense that my writing isn’t scattered with spelling errors and misuse of punctuation; but in the sense that I am careful about where I source my facts and how I attribute them.  I have never been on the wrong end of the plagiarism stick, never accidentally, and certainly never deliberately – if I can’t do the work, I’ll chew on the failure that comes with that rather than be branded a charlatan and a cheat, and I certainly won’t get caught up in the victimisation of the careless.

TurnItIn is a system used by schools, colleges and other academic establishments to check for plagiarism and originality in works.  It works by collecting up a huge database off the web of documents, essays, articles and the like, then comparing submitted documents with what it has on file.  If there are blocks of text that are similar, either identical word for word or closely paraphrased, the submission is flagged as unoriginal and questions are no doubt asked of the author.  When I read about TurnItIn, I thought “what an excellent idea” – finally, using the massive computing power and storage resources we have available in the Internet age, we can have a compendium of works that can be used to evaluate the originality supposed of new creations.

I then learned that TurnItIn has another feature – it actually collects work that have been submitted – so every student that writes an essay for a university that uses the service has their work put permanently on file for comparison with future submissions by other students.  I began to consider the legal implications of this behaviour.  Effectively, TurnItIn violates the copyrights owned by every student that has ever submitted a piece of work via their University or college.  Just like a teenager that has amassed a huge quantity of stolen digital music from around the Internet, TurnItIn has collected a truly colossal volume of works.  They aren’t just holding these works for themselves either – they are essentially monetising this collection by making it a cornerstone of their service – without this collected data, TurnItIn wouldn’t have such a strong selling point in this market.

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Damo in NYC – Part 1

In just two days time I’ll be heading out to New York City with my good friends from university Sam Van Lieshout and JP Lacerda.  We are the UK finalists of the Microsoft 2011 Imagine Cup and we’re heading out to compete in the world finals in New York this week!

Our project is called Project OVE.  It aims to provide an easy and secure way for charities to exchange volunteer information and make it easier for charitable organisations to coordinate and distribute their volunteering efforts.    At the core of Project OVE  is a peer to peer network-based application written in C#.  I won’t re-explain everything here because our website pretty much has an explanation of how exactly it works covered – and if anyone has any questions, please do post a comment on one of the posts there and we’ll do our best to enlighten you!

All the way from it’s roots  as a passing conversation in the Fallowfield branch of Wetherspoons in sunny Manchester, UK – Project OVE has worked it’s way from an idea on paper to the winner of the UK Imagine Cup, and now we’re taking on the rest of the world in the finals.  I’ll be blogging and tweeting and uploading lots of media related to our progress during the 6 days in New York so everyone can stay tuned on how Project OVE is fairing in the finals.  We’re currently polishing the final version of our presentation to be made to the panel of judges on the 9th of this month, hopefully it will be a success and make a big impression!

Wish us luck!