In my own understanding about plagiarisms are the
following : Plagiarism is one of the most serious types of student misconduct
happening in universities today. Some students do not realize they are
plagiarizing so is it fair that every student who plagiarizes receive the same
punishment? Plagiarism is unfair to other students because his or her work is
graded against dishonest work and plagiarism is the responsibility of each
student to cite properly and reference data, statistics, or other sources of
information that are used in his or her submission. Plagiarism is misconduct
committed by students who do not take the added measure to give credit to the
author of material the students used in his or her own article. Plagiarism is a
form of cheating, when a student does not give proper credit to the author or
authors they have researched this is called academic theft. Once a student
understands plagiarism they have the knowledge to cite properly and reference
the materials that he or she will use in their academic and employment. Once a
student understands how to use MLA and APA he or she will not commit academic
fraud. Students should be aware of the punishments that come when he or she
steals the work, ideas, and thoughts of another person.
Plagiarism is a complex and emotive issue, as
previous Tech dirt posts on the subject have shown Perhaps
because of that complexity, people often seem confused about the difference
between plagiarism and copyright infringement. First, plagiarism is a violation of
academic norms but not illegal; copyright violation second is illegal, but in
truth pretty ubiquitous in academia. (Where did you get that PDF?) Second,
plagiarism is an offence against the author, while copyright violation is an
offence against the copyright holder. In traditional academic publishing, they
are usually not the same person, due to the ubiquity of copyright transfer
agreements, Third plagiarism applies when ideas are copied, whereas copyright
violation occurs only when a specific fixed expression (e.g. sequence of words)
is copied. Fourth avoiding plagiarism is about properly apportioning
intellectual credit, whereas copyright is about maintaining revenue streams.
Plagiarism is about the failure
to properly attribute the authorship of copied material (whether copies of
ideas or of text or images). Copyright violation is about failure to pay for
the use of the material. plagiarism is also using a
created production without crediting the source.To avoid
plagiarism cite your sources use quotation marks on exact words.
Plagiarism comes
from a Latin word for "kidnapper." Using the ideas or words of others
without acknowledging the source is plagiarism. This is true even if the ideas
of someone else are paraphrased or summarized. In scholarly research,
plagiarism is considered unethical and dishonest.
How i really use copyrighted material ? in education we are not completely restricted by copyright laws ." Fair use " allows for limited use of copyrighted words for educational and research purposes.Copyright is the exclusive legal reproduce distribute the matter and form of something . no one else may use , copy or alter the work without permission or under certain circumstances. Copyright is addressed in both federal statutes and case law (legal decisions delivered by the courts). Except for some very specific statutes that apply to the results of scientific research for the government, plagiarism does not appear in federal statutes. However, it very well could be grounds for legal action, or in an academic environment, disciplinary action.Copyright is concerned with more than properly crediting sources. Excessive use of another's original work, even if the source is properly acknowledged, may be a copyright infringement.
Here are some security issues.
Here are six of the most common
security vulnerabilities you must protect yourself against.SQL Injections.Cross
Site Scripting (XSS)Broken Authentication & Session Management.Insecure
Direct Object References.Security Misconfiguration.Cross-Site Request Forgery
(CSRF)
When deploying a Web service, you have to think
about how you will secure that service. Yes, even if you decide to open up
access to the service to everyone and anyone, you still have to think about
security — For example, protecting yourself against people seeking to deny
access to your service. Security encompasses the following:Equipment
deployment:Authenticating users:Guarding data so that users only see what they
should see:Tracking user activity
Any and all of these items may be
a part of your overall security plan. In this chapter, we will take a look at
all of these items and show how you can use them to make your Web service more
secure.
Equipment deployment One
of the easiest things to do to secure your corporate data is to use hardware in
an intelligent way. When deploying a publicly accessible Web service, you will
want to expose as little of your internal infrastructure as necessary. There
are a number of things you will want to do:Put your database machines behind a
firewall.Use hardware to protect your equipment. For example, rely on routers
instead of software firewalls. Hardware is typically faster at routing and is
easier to lock down. The software firewall may have unknown interactions
with which to deal Make use of a demilitarized zone (DMZ). In other words, only
put the machine serving the Web service on the public Internet.
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