tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8004649849101357455.post848505073130259488..comments2023-04-07T02:47:51.081-10:00Comments on Edit Hawai‘i: A Million Little LiesPathttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04525687436544097069noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8004649849101357455.post-66920286890673648012007-03-20T08:22:00.000-10:002007-03-20T08:22:00.000-10:00Ritchie, I neglected to answer your question about...Ritchie, I neglected to answer your question about editors being more responsible about what they publish. <B>Acquisition</B> editors select what gets published; often, as I said before on the blog, their decisions have to be approved by editorial boards.<BR/><BR/>Copyeditors do not decide what gets published; however, if they feel strongly about manuscripts, they may voice their opinions to the acquisitions editors. These opinions may or may not affect what gets on the publisher's list.Pathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04525687436544097069noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8004649849101357455.post-46136882070521278702007-03-19T13:39:00.000-10:002007-03-19T13:39:00.000-10:00Re the New Yorker's fact-checking team: please tak...Re the <I>New Yorker</I>'s fact-checking team: please take a look at this <A HREF="http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1129" REL="nofollow">opinion by David Robinson.</A><BR/><BR/>I appreciate Mr. Robinson's statements and hope that my class—past and present—will read what he has to say. Well worth reading, his comments temper mine.Pathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04525687436544097069noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8004649849101357455.post-18447298198018302192007-03-19T07:05:00.000-10:002007-03-19T07:05:00.000-10:00And a million little chances to do the right thing...And a million little chances to do the right thing—all spurned in the quest for fame and profit.<BR/><BR/>Frey is a liar and a thief: someone who stole people's esteem, faith, and goodwill. Not to mention all the money he made off the sales of his book.<BR/><BR/>Doubleday and Anchor are chastened, and they have no doubt added a penalty clause to their contracts that is activated when the author misrepresents his or her work. Or, rather, when they find out the author has done so.<BR/><BR/>Plagiarism is another plague that has visited some of the U.S.'s biggest and most important publishers in the last decade. <A HREF="http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=513000" REL="nofollow">This story</A> about Kaavya Viswanathan, a Harvard sophomore who plagiarized the work of a woman named Megan McCafferty, got a tremendous amount of coverage when it appeared; below is an excerpt.<BR/><BR/>* * *<BR/><BR/><B>PLAGIARISM OR COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT?</B><BR/><BR/>Even if Viswanathan is found to have plagiarized passages, McCafferty may not be able to bring a copyright lawsuit against her. In fact, Viswanathan may be more likely to face a suit from her own publisher over a contract violation.<BR/><BR/>According to legal experts, infringement litigation operates under a “different standard” [from] plagiarism. They said that it is possible to plagiarize a work without infringing on its copyright.<BR/><BR/>“Plagiarism is passing off one’s work as your own, but that doesn’t necessarily make it copyright infringement,” Justin Hughes, the director of the intellectual property law program at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo School of Law, said. “In an infringement action, a person can use a ‘fair use’ defense. That is, that they didn’t use so many words as to be guilty of infringement.”<BR/><BR/>Lawrence Lessig, a prominent intellectual property scholar at Stanford Law School, also said that plagiarism and copyright infringement are different concepts.<BR/><BR/>“If I use a sentence from another work and pass it off as my own without citing it or quoting it, that might not be copyright infringement because I wouldn’t necessarily need permission to use it,” Lessig said. “But since I’m asserting that I am, in fact, the author of that sentence, that would be plagiarism.”<BR/><BR/>Though Viswanathan might not face copyright penalties from Random House, she could face a suit from her own publisher.<BR/><BR/>Hughes said publishing and movie contracts normally include clauses requiring that the author’s work be original.<BR/><BR/>“If she has a book deal, there is probably a contractual clause as to her work being original both with her publisher and with DreamWorks,” Hughes said. “This is a matter of contractual law, not of cut-and-dry copyright law.”<BR/><BR/>He added: “Of course, we don’t know what the contract looked like, and they’re not going to show us.”<BR/><BR/>* * *<BR/><BR/><I>The New Yorker,</I> as you may know, was famous for its team of fact-checkers: people who would check the facts of every piece of nonfiction the magazine published. I don't know if this team still exists; my guess is not. See <A HREF="http://archives.cjr.org/year/94/3/facts.asp" REL="nofollow">this article</A> from the <I>Columbia Journalism Review.</I> The tip-off for me came, as I said in class, when an article by Malcom Gladwell appeared with the word <I>bacteria</I> used as a singular noun.Pathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04525687436544097069noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8004649849101357455.post-40121360415218979922007-03-17T19:15:00.000-10:002007-03-17T19:15:00.000-10:00More careful what they publish or more careful put...More careful what they publish or more careful putting a piece of writing in the correct genre--it's probably just a marketing scheme.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com