CSC 379 SUM2008:Week 2, Group 1
Turn-it-in and MOSS
Protecting against plagiarism in academic work is important and many tools are available for instructors to use to verify students are not incorporating known works into their own without attribution. Turn-it-in for essays, and MOSS for software are two. Both require sending a copy of a student’s work to a central repository for it to be checked against the other works that the repository contains. The results are reported to the instructor and the student’s work is retained in the repository, adding to the body of work that future works will be checked against.
Examine the ethical considerations surrounding use of programs like Turn-it-in and MOSS.
- http://turnitin.com/static/plagiarism.html
- http://chronicle.com/free/2008/03/2250n.htm
- http://theory.stanford.edu/~aiken/moss/
- http://www.cse.nd.edu/~kwb/nsf-ufe/1110.pdf
What is MOSS
MOSS (Measure Of Software Similarity) is a system for determining the similarity of different programs. To date, the main application of MOSS has been in detecting plagiarism in programming classes. Since its development in 1994, Moss has been very effective in this role. The algorithm behind moss is a significant improvement over other cheating detection algorithms. The system was developed by (and resides at) Stanford. The algorithm is hidden to end users, meaning users must send the batch of code to Standford's server and wait for a response.
Supported Languages: C, C++, Java, C#, Python, Visual Basic, Javascript, FORTRAN, ML, Haskell, Lisp, Scheme, Pascal, Modula2, Ada, Perl, TCL, Matlab, VHDL, Verilog, Spice, MIPS assembly, a8086 assembly, a8086 assembly, MIPS assembly, HCL2
For more information on MOSS, visit Stanford's site at the following link: [1]
What is TurnItIn?
TurnItIn got its start in 1996 when a group of researchers at UC Berkeley created a series of computer programs to monitor the recycling of research papers in their large undergraduate classes. The researchers teamed with a group of teachers, mathematicians, and computer scientists to form Plagiarism.org, the world's first internet-based plagiarism detection service.
By late 1998, Plagiarism.org had become the center of international media attention. The small organization was featured in several major media venues, including Good Morning America, World News Tonight, and the New York Times. In the six years since, Plagiarism.org has continued to grow and is now recognized around the world as TurnItIn and iThenticate, the internet's most widely used and trusted resources for preventing the spread of internet plagiarism.
TurnItIn's homepage can be found at the following link: [2]
What is plagiarism?
Ethical considerations
Student's work is stored in repository for every one to compare against. <starting point>