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Is it plagiarism to write a novel for publication and apply familiar paragraphs, stories and online expressions?

Not exactly. I found it in a forum. I hope it will help you. In addition, there is a link to a detailed explanation of novel plagiarism. )

Definition of plagiarism by the Copyright Administration Department of the National Copyright Administration

1. Plagiarism and plagiarism mentioned in the Copyright Law are the same concept (hereinafter referred to as plagiarism, for the sake of brevity), which means stealing other people's works or pieces of works for their own use.

Plagiarism infringement, like other infringements, requires four elements: first, the act is illegal; Second, objective facts that are harmful; Third, there is a causal relationship with the damage facts; Fourth, the actor is at fault. Because plagiarism needs to be published to produce infringement consequences, that is, the objective fact of damage, it is usually referred to as published plagiarism when identifying plagiarism.

Therefore, more accurately, plagiarism refers to stealing other people's works or publishing fragments of works.

Secondly, from the form of plagiarism, there are acts of copying others' works intact or basically intact, and there are also acts of taking others' original components protected by copyright as their own after a makeover. The former is called low-level plagiarism in the field of copyright law enforcement, and the latter is called high-level plagiarism.

It is easier to identify low-level plagiarism. Advanced plagiarism needs careful appraisal, even expert appraisal.

Advanced plagiarism often encountered in copyright enforcement includes: changing the type of works and treating the works created by others as their own independent works, such as changing novels into movies; Instead of changing the type of work, we use elements protected by copyright in the work and change the specific expression of the work, and regard the work created by others as our own independent work, for example, others' creation.

Three, as mentioned above, copyright infringement, like other civil rights, should have four elements, among which, the fault of the actor includes intention and negligence. This principle is also applicable to the identification of plagiarism infringement, regardless of whether there is subjective intention to take others' works as your own.

Four, the identification of plagiarism, is not whether all or part of the use of other people's works, whether it is well received by the outside world, whether it constitutes a major or substantial part of plagiarism.

Everything that constitutes the above elements is regarded as plagiarism. The above opinions are for your reference.

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