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Of course as the copyright holder you have
the right to freely distribute all of your material. However, if you were the
one borrowing the slides as described on this thread, what would you say to
your students who, in studying for a test using Google, came across the
original slides with correct attribution and they wanted to know how what you
have done is any different from what you taught them is plagiarism? I hope no
one is mirroring anyone’s interactive plagiarism exercise without proper
attribution. Rick Dr. Rick Froman From: Rick Stevens [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Personally, if anyone wanted to use my slides I'd be
happy to let them. I would prefer that they asked first, but, I'm for the
giving away of psychology, lectures and all. I wouldn't confront anyone
who appropriated my slides for educational use. -- __ Dr. Rick Stevens__ Psychology Department__ __ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To make changes to your subscription go to: http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?enter=tips&text_mode=0&lang=english |
- [tips] Re: Intellectual Property Rick Froman
- [tips] RE: Intellectual Property John W. Nichols, M.A.
- [tips] Re: Intellectual Property John W. Nichols, M.A.
- [tips] Re: Intellectual Property Rick Stevens
- [tips] Re: Intellectual Property John W. Nichols, M.A.
- [tips] Re: Intellectual Property Rob Weisskirch
