There is a bit of a problem with students cheating in high school, in college, and now right on into graduate school – something that cannot be good for those of us counting on our doctors having memorized body parts and getting the multiple choice exam questions on tibia and fibula correct. We faculty face an uphill battle on cheating prevention and detection. However, we had found Turnitin, a software program that causes papers that have been lifted from or downloaded from the internet to light up like Christmas trees upon detecting those suspiciously similar passages from existing papers floating in cyberspace, including those featured on pay-to-get-your-term-paper sites. We had found a detective agency for ferreting out paper fraud. We fed 100,000 papers per day into the Turnitin data base. But, students from Fairfax County, Virginia and Tucson, Arizona protested mightily. You can’t download our papers and use them for free, they cried loudly with their iPods earbuds in place playing pirated music. So, the little darlings sued iParadigms, the LLC that developed Turnitin. Copyright infringement, cried they! Continue reading →