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Luc Pattyn wrote: If that fails
too, Uncle Sam can send the troops, We'll ahve to convince George W. call them terrorist (it seems to be a popular label for those who do not think like the US); and then let George over throw their government for a regime more friendly to the US government.
It worked well in the past:
Roosevelt and the Panama Canal (this eventually got us Noriega)
The Shaw of Iran (this got us a 3 year hostage situation)
Taliban (under Reagan, Osama and bunch were 'Freedom Fighters')
Iraq (ths hasn't worked well yet, the US still ahs the high oil prices. But George W got to accomplish a major goal - murdering a world leader who had a different ideology)
[countless othrs omitted]
Jeff
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I've been experimenting with this and have come to the conclusion that fingerprinting is not necessary *unless* you want to know specifically if the text was copied *off* CodeProject directly and not simply a submission at another site.
A lot depends upon whether the infringing site is google searchable or not.
If it is, then it's easy enough to just use the first middle and last sentence in the article text to positively search. In fact in my testing the first sentence of every article I tried was always unique on it's own searched in quotes on google.
Of course people submit the same article to more than once site so a list of legit sites would need to be kept in any automated way of doing this.
If you want to know specifically if an article was copied directly from CodeProject then you would have no other option but to insert or modify some part of the article text automatically. There are many ways of doing this, the best use natural language algorithms to alter a few sentences in text in such a way that it's meaning is completely unchanged but it's easily identifiable and unique. Not worth the bother I guess. The other way would be encourage people to deliberately add something on their own to the article that would not interfere with it but yield a highly unique phrase that they also identify when submitting the article.
Or you could simply offer a small reward of some kind for the first person who discovers a pirate site or have an "intern" do a quick search once every couple of weeks for article content and see where it leads (it's pretty easy to do and would only take a few minutes if you pick a representative set of article highly rated, new, whatever).
In my searching none of the articles at that buzzy site seem to be indexed by google yet so it was a wash.
"I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon
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Hi John,
the site is so slow the Google crawler must give up long before it is done...
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this weeks tips:
- make Visual display line numbers: Tools/Options/TextEditor/...
- show exceptions with ToString() to see all information
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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You used a relative link, not a direct message link, your link now goes nowhere.
"I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon
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Link corrected,
thank you
Russell
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Hi,
I am not able to follow the link. Can you provide the title of the Suggestion?
Jeff
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Link corrected,
thank you
Russell
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_Russell_ wrote: Link corrected
modified maybe, corrected no.
You should copy the "Permalink" button and publish that.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this weeks tips:
- make Visual display line numbers: Tools/Options/TextEditor/...
- show exceptions with ToString() to see all information
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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Thanks. it looks different now and works fine.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this weeks tips:
- make Visual display line numbers: Tools/Options/TextEditor/...
- show exceptions with ToString() to see all information
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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Chris,
I think you have lawsuit material with BuzzyCode[^]. It looks like the entire site, when it works, was put together by a couple of idiots wanting to copy CP and they've populated their "articles database" by copy'n'pasting LOTS of articles directly from CP. The "people" "posting" the articles are all fake, as are the comments to them. The site says they've got some 2,700+ articles. I wonder how many of them were copied from here?? Hell, I think the entire site is a badly written copy of CP itself!
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They have been contacted and we will protect the rights of our authors to the full extent of the law. This is totally unacceptable.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Hi Chris,
I signed up to that very productive site immediately (only members can download).
They have 500 members and over 2000 articles now.
An article download is a ZIP containing one or more ZIPs straight from CodeProject,
so first advice to CP authors should be to include some comment and/or text file
in our ZIPs.
I do not understand why they have stolen only one of my articles (Sokoban).
[ADDED] They kept the sentence "Some of the following items relate to recent
topics on one of the CodeProject message boards" intact, that's nice. [/ADDED]
And I did not find a way to submit articles !?
Is it OK if I continue to use CodeProject? I can only hope they copy our good
stuff, and attract some/all of the trolls.
I trust you will speed up the launch of the new CP site to beat the competition
-- modified at 11:14 Wednesday 29th August, 2007
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this weeks tips:
- make Visual display line numbers: Tools/Options/TextEditor/...
- show exceptions with ToString() to see all information
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
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You may certainly continue to use CodeProject. However, what they have done is illegal and totally goes against the spirit of the community. It's appalling behaviour and I'm disgusted with them for stealing our authors' work so blatantly.
My advice: please do not support that site. It only encourages others.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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They are unauthorized CP mirrors and blood-sucking-leaches. I hope that CP has already initiated intellectual property infringment suit against that LogicsIndia.
Chris Maunder wrote: My advice: please do not support that site. It only encourages others.
That is why I am trying to emphasize in my posts that we should not click links from CP to boost the referral traffic to him. Isn't it correct, Chris?
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Pretty cool:
here and here.
Maybe it's a gate to a weird parallel universe? Who knows?
BTW: I like the cat in the top left corner... I think I'm gonna switch to Buzzycode
Cheers,
Mario M.
Dear CodeProject member: Please don't forget to show me how clever you are by rating also this message as "crap/spam/trash" instead of writing a meaningful response!
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: The "people" "posting" the articles are all fake
True. They are trying to boost the page rank. Hence I responded in another thread that let us not click any link to BuzzyCode which will boost the Referral Traffic. Let us manually copy the link and paste it in a new isolated browser window.
We should not support that plagaristic felony website even indirectly.
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Just a comment: the text in some articles wraps correctly when viewed using IE. In other articles, I have to expand the browser to occupy the entire desktop to keep from having to scroll left-right to read. Very inconvenient when trying to experiment with code in an article.
Not everyone has dual screens.
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If an article scrolls too wide then report it as broken. All edited articles should fit within a page. Unedited articles - those submitted directly by members - may not. We'll fix them as soon as we're made aware of them.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Hi Chris or who ever is in charge!
I'm sorry for contacting you this way but I have a complaint:
How does this "article voting system" work? And what is even more important: What is it good for?
I mean: we don't get paid for writing articles and that's OK but I don't see why an author should get discredited by frustrated teens that give bad votes just for fun.
I'd suggest that negative votes must contain a reasonable explanation that states why the according article is "crap". Otherwise the author has no idea how he/she should improve his/her article and this leads to frustration!
And why are those votings anonymously? If someone thinks that my article is "poor" I'd like to know why!
Maybe you should reconsider that voting system!
Cheers,
Mario M.
Dear CodeProject member: Please don't forget to show me how clever you are by rating also this message as "crap/spam/trash" instead of writing a meaningful response!
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