The best way is to approach a lawyer familiar with Indian copyright laws(
which have been recently revised to include web publishing and internet
circulation of films, music, dance videos,fusion etc) that have attained some
specificity as to what constitutes plagiarism and book piracy.There are also
organisations like The Authors Guild of India to which one can appeal, but they
do not have legal standing; they can only negotiate between the complainant and
the accused.The onus to prove the charge of plagiarism remains on the one who
complains.In spite of all these plagiarism is on the increse in India,
especially that related to research as recently pointed out by an IIT
friend.But detecting plagiarism has also become easier with the net search and
IIT , he said, had developed a definite mechanism to uncover plagiarism in
research papers.Look at things from below.> Date: Mon, 9 Jun 2008 00:25:36
-0700> Subject: [GreenYouth] victims of Plagiarism in India> From: [EMAIL
PROTECTED]> To: [email protected]> > > My friend from Pakistan asks
"how plagiarism cases are dealt with in> India". Could you help? Any victims
who can speak more that you know?> Reply.>
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