This message was sent on various mailing lists on the Internet
on the 6th of June 1995. Reproduced with permission of Chris Jesshope
(c.jesshope@ee.surrey.ac.uk). Click here to
see the role played by SCAM.
The original message of June 6, 1995 included a list of papers,
which had either been published by or submitted to professional
journals and conference proceedings, in which the alleged plagiarist
was listed as the author or a co-author. Although D-Lib Magazine
condemns plagiarism, we have withheld the name and identifying
affiliations of the individual.
Dear Computer Science Community, authors, CS publishers, Conference Chair-persons, This e-mail gives a comprehensive account on the case of a plagiarism concerning papers submitted to EURO-PAR 95 and subsequently invested on behalf of the Steering and Programme Committees of the EURO-PAR conference. History of the case: During the meeting of the Programme Committee (PC) of EURO-PAR'95, last March, it was discovered that plagiarised papers had been submitted to the conference. The case was brought to the attention of the Steering Committee (SC) of EURO-PAR, which decided to further pursue the issue, by conducting an investigation. The investigation has reached some conclusive results, which point to a single name behind these plagiarisms: {Name}. The investigation conducted with the help of several people around the world, has identified so far, with conclusive evidence, that the real person {Name}, is the person behind of all listed below cases. The conclusions are based on (a) copies of 'his' papers compared against papers/reports received from his victims, (b) on e-mails and correspondence received from his victims and (c) on copies of correspondence exchanged between {Name} (and/or other ghost persons) and the involved Conf. and Journal's officials, which the latter have provided us. Results of the investigation: (a) {Name} is a real person. He is currently registered as a Ph.D. student at the Univ. of {Name} (earlier he was registed at the {Name} but he was expelled because of plagiarism cases). (b) {Name} has managed to publish several plagiarized papers to international journals and conferences (see section A below), he has submitted several plagiarized papers (see section B below), and he has several suspicious published papers in his CV (see section C below). (c) ftp over Internet seems to be the means {Name} has used for his actions. Unfortunately, the current state of the art in the area of authentication, access control, authors's rights, etc are unable to identify, beyond doubt, the intruder's ftp action. (d) All plagiarism cases though they involve various names of authors and affiliations, they all give as correspondence address that of {Name} mentioned above. (e) Some plagiarism cases of {Name} were known by offended authors much earlier than the time the SC and PC of EURO-PAR found out, but were not publicized. This gave him time to continue his practice. What it is proposed: a) the offended authors, publishers, etc, to take the initiative to react the way they think appropriate. b) the offended authors to react the way they think appropriate towards publishers, editors, {Name}, etc, in order to get the credit deserved for their plagiarized work. c) the CS community to think of measures and techniques, of new refereeing methods, tools, etc., that may prevent such phenomena in the future. d) the above case to be publishised by everyone as widely as possible. Acknowledgements: The SC and the PC of EURO-PAR wishes to pay tribute to (a) the referees of EURO-PAR'95 who spotted the submitted plagiarized papers, (b) offended authors who kindly provided evidence and (c) Narayanan Shivakumar from Stanford, the SCAM tool of whom, has remarkably identified most of the below listed sources of plagiarisms, (d) and last but by no means least to Costas Halatsis who has contributed much of his valuable time in conducting this investigation. The Steering Committee of EURO-PAR conferences Chris Jesshope, Chairman ------------------------------------------------------