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December 21st, 2004, 04:45 PM
#12
I almost completely relyt on online sources for most of my resarch these days. This is likely because I am studying computer security. Any book in this area will likely cost in the range of $75. By the time these books show up in libraries, usually two years, they are already obsolete and useless to me. There are a few exceptions, mainly purely theoretical book writeen about general information security, but most still tend to discuss particualr techniques specific to individual scenarios, operating systems, and hardware. And this i only for books which discuss mostly theoretical issues.
Any book that is specific to any software, operating system, or hardware, is out of date long before I can ever find it in a library. This makes libraries useles to me as a means of research on technological issues. However, a library is still usefull in some areas for me such as law and philosophy.
So aside from online source, I am left mainly with periodicals, such as newspapers, journals, magazines, and sometimes the evening news. But when you actually stop to think about it, any information available as part of one of these sources is alos available online through their website. So, when I use the CBC as part of a research paper, does it matter whether I obtain that information through a transcript or thier website? I do not think so.
Insofar as other online research materials are concerned, I find that most students are quite happy after finding one source to base their papers on. If this source is wrong, they are usually in for quite a surprise. This is usually because they have another four papers to write by next Monday and are quite happy to just have it done. Such is the life of a student. Get it done, get it out of the way, and move on to the next assignment. Then if any time is left over once the bare minimum has been accomplished, polishing and refining can be done. There is just a lot less time for polishing and refining than most professors seem to think.
I would also like to add that students are not the only source of plagarism in an academic environment. Two fof four of my profesors have garnered every single test an assignment from online sources. This annoys me to no end because even if I do not use online sources for answers, others students certainly will, and they shre it with me whether I like it or not, just to brag about finding the answers, if for nothing else. Assignment would be a lot more challnenging if not all the answers were online. For my investigations course, every assignment comes right off of the Honeynet Project. In addidtion to hosting the original problem, the Honeynet Project also posts the top ten response papers for each one, on which the marking scheme is based.
Now as far as I am concerned, this is plagarism. Becaus emy professor is too lazy to ake his own assignments and instead chooses to use somebody else's work, my academic progress suffers as a result, because the answers are provided for me. Unfortunately, since there is no law against this (the honeynet project and its answeres are GPL licensed) and no section of our academic policy prohibits it, I am unable to do anything about it.
Which brings me to another point. Some students use papers which are specifically GPL licensed. This legally permits them to use these papers anywhere they wish, on two major conditions: The original source is credited, and no money is made in doing so. Given that the latter is already met in an academic environment, what is then the ethically correct response to a student handing in someone else's GPL licensed work, if they credit the original source?
Government is like fire - a handy servant, but a dangerous master - George Washington
Government is not reason, it is not eloquence - it is force. - George Washington.
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