Every year or two there's a plagiarism scandal that makes the front page. The latest one concerns some stuff written a long time ago by Claudine Gay, president of Harvard University.
I am, as usual, unimpressed. With only occasional exceptions, these things are always the same: the culprit has been caught taking a sentence here and there from another source with only light rephrasing. Sometimes it's not even a whole sentence. It's never more than a short paragraph.
Who cares? Sure, it's a little lazy, but that's about it. In Gay's case it amounts to maybe a dozen phrases or sentences out of hundreds of pages, most of them technical descriptions of survey results. There are no stolen ideas or wholesale ripoffs. And none of the supposed victims seems to care except for Carol Swain, who wrote an aggrieved op-ed mostly about the fact that she felt insufficiently kowtowed to. "When one follows in the footsteps of a more senior scholar, one is expected to acknowledge the latter’s contribution to the field," she says as a warmup, before complaining that Gay is just another mediocre affirmative action hire.
But Swain is a crazy person who hates the left these days, so what do you expect? The actual plagiarism of Swain's work is minuscule and meaningless, as it almost always is. As Jo Guldi explains, a big part of this is basically an abuse of technology:
New technology makes possible an expanded definition of plagiarism that does not match our concern with misappropriating ideas.... Computers can search out every five word overlaps. Does it matter?... The technology of text mining can be used to destroy the career of any scholar at any time. The offense can be so trivial as to be meaningless in the line of argumentation on which the scholar works. The tech can be leveled against a dissertation, like Gay’s, that was composed before plagiarized software was even available. No matter. If you take a moral stand and others dislike you or are jealous of you, they will use these arguments to destroy your career.
Now, this is just me. I know that academics have their own standards, and that's fine. Nonetheless, I don't think very many of these cases pass a common-sense test for stealing work, and I wish we could all knock it off.
POSTSCRIPT: For an example of a real case of plagiarism, check out The Book of Animal Secrets, by USC oncologist David Agus. "It’s very bad," says Elisabeth Bik, a scientific integrity consultant. "The examples I’m looking at look like literally copy-paste jobs." Among many other things, it turns out Agus copied verbatim big chunks of a blog post titled “The Ten Craziest Facts You Should Know About A Giraffe.” Now that's plagiarism. If you're going to do it, you might as well do it right and then blame your researchers if you get caught.