This post is good!, by a person with reputation 38!
https://steemit.com/health/@maahijain/this-is-what-a-perfect-day-of-eating-looks-like-a-day-s-worth-of-clean-eating-meals-and-snacks#@originalworks/re-re-maahijain-this-is-what-a-perfect-day-of-eating-looks-like-a-day-s-worth-of-clean-eating-meals-and-snacks-20171110t171423569z-20171110t171602
Wanna be @curie curator! : )
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
@umais I think you still need to work on your plagiarism detection skills. This author published another post the same hour this post you linked was published. First let me note that publishing two detailed articles in the same hour on different subjects is an almost certain sign of plagiarization in and of itself - nobody that takes the time to write two detailed articles would drop them at the same time, they would spread them out. But look at the content of those two articles. I am 100% certain, without a shadow of a doubt, that they were not written by the same person.
Compare this paragraph from the other post published at the same time:
With this paragraph from the post you link:The first quote is nearly perfect English. There are a few slightly strange word choices that indicate perhaps this was written by someone for whom English is a second language, but verbs are conjugated correctly, nouns are pluralized correctly, the sentences are complete sentences and punctuation is used correctly.
The second quote looks like it was either written by someone who barely speaks English, or like it was translated by a translation software that did a poor job. What the heck does this sentence mean? "Health issues are frequent effortlessly us and don't seem to obtain a permanent way to it." This is a nonsense sentence. The entire article is filled with stuff like this. "Frequent" should be "frequently" and "effortlessly" should be "effortless" but the word itself doesn't make sense here, and "don't seem to obtain a permanent way to it" means nothing.
Still improving.. I am really really sorry...
Check out other posts that I posted in your post.
I take oath I will improving on plagiarism detection skills.
no worries, I appreciate your effort. I will work my way through the submissions eventually, but I am taking a break for tonight. I am a bit behind.
Like I said previously I would actually advise submitting fewer links here, and instead focusing on really making sure they are quality and the author is quality. Make sure you look at the author's blog. I would never submit a post without first considering other posts the author has written - warning signs to look for include:
Hope this helps
Also keep an eye out for mangled sentences like the one I pointed out above that are dead giveaways for an article translated from another language by a translation software.
Thanks! For Help, No problem you can take your time. : )
The post I submitted are really good BTW
Will keep your tips in mind and one day I will be @curie curator.
Again thanks, Every person has weak points and plagiarism detection is for me. Hope I will improve.
BTW calling @originalworks is a terrible way to tell if something is plagiarized. I see @originalworks signing off on plagiarized work all the time, particularly when it has been translated from another language but even if just a few words have been changed around it misses it. Many times a simple Google search of a paragraph will reveal that just a few words had been changed, but @originalworks still didn't catch that it was copy/paste. I like @originalworks, it is a great concept, but it is not particularly reliable.
Will keep that in mind, Thank you.
Would love if you would check other posts I posted here.