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September 07, 2005

A program called CopyGuard has been introduced by LexisNexis. The aim of CopyGuard is to spot plagiarism or copyright violations in journalistic work before articles go to print, reports the New York Times. CopyGuard calculates the percentage of material in an article that is suspected unoriginal. It highlights the suspected text and identifies its possible original source. The program uses the LexisNexis database that consists of over six billion documents as well as web pages archived by iParadigm, the company which developed CopyGuard together with LexisNexis. John Barrie, chief executive of iParadigms described the program's working principle in the New York Times: "We take digital fingerprints of individual documents and compare them to the digital fingerprints of existing documents." However, that does also mean that documents which are not archived cannot be checked.

CopyGuard could potentially be a useful tool for editors when confirming the integrity of their journalists' articles. Scandals the likes of Jayson Blair, which compromised the reputation of the New York Times, could be more easily avoided.

Source: New York Times, LexisNexis


Originally posted by Anna-Maria Mende from editorsweblog.org, remediated by yatta on Sep 7, 2005 at 11:55 PM