Lmao well this new one is much worse than the first one of these articles https://www.businessinsider.com/neri-oxman-plagiarize-wikipedia-mit-dissertation-2024-1?_gl=1*xvxzaz*_ga*MTAzMzk1NzAwOS4xNzA0NDA3NDUx*_ga_E21CV80ZCZ*MTcwNDUwMTE0Ny4zLjAuMTcwNDUwMTE0OC41OS4wLjA.
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This is too fucking perfect!
That's what she said.
"I can't imagine why anyone would do that, because anyone who knows even the rudiments of algebraic topology could come up with their own sentence."
Unfortunately, the edit history for at least the examples I checked showed the copied text as the end result of multiple edits from multiple users. Also it's still against the rules to reuse your own work without proper citation
Somehow I'm not surprised.
https://truthout.org/articles/report-all-cnn-gaza-coverage-seen-by-bureau-monitored-by-idf-before-publication/
It’s well understood tactic. By some.
If you’re an academic celebrity, they let you do it.
Okay, if that's how he wants to play it - but he's going to have to divorce his wife. There's no way someone with his high standards of academic integrity could possibly spend the rest of his life with her.