I struggle with this because I do a lot of my scholarship in public. I share works in progress on my website as well as course design and syllabi. I do this because I want to show people the many ways we can build a diverse and inclusive premodern. 1/ https://t.co/ykdmxzVCja
-
-
from an IP perspective, tho, they are parts of the same spectrum-- if we normalize citing informal digital/social media sources, as we sometimes do conference papers, then we take a step toward shutting the gate to stealing ideas we post online. (again, not suggesting it's easy!)
-
I wonder if academic writing might borrow here from journalism, where citing tweets (and hyperlinking them) is standard practice for journalistic footnoting. It seems like having a public, date-and-time-stamped record of your expression isn’t a bad way to protect it.
- Näytä vastaukset
Uusi keskustelu -
Lataaminen näyttää kestävän hetken.
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.
But you’re right, here it’s more the plagiarism, which is more sophisticated than outright copy paste as Adam has noted in his post.