\(
\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
\)
Predatory ‘patents’ and design deceit: when the intellectual property system is recruited in academic fraud
2025
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DataCite | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Details
Title
Predatory ‘patents’ and design deceit: when the intellectual property system is recruited in academic fraud
Author
Item Type
Journal article
Description
1 online resource (pp. 143–148)
ISSN
2045-9807 (Print)
2045-9815 (Online)
2045-9815 (Online)
Summary
Academic fraud is always a question of authorship – or more specifically, it is the disarticulation of authorship from the copyright artefact, the luxation of the author’s own intellectual creation and its expression. Academic fraud turns the prestige of authorship into a commodity and sets it afloat in a sea of anonymous and unanchored objects. Whether such fraud concerns plagiarism, or paper mills, or the mainstreaming of generative-AI and similar routes to text, these forms of ‘acquired’ authorship detach authorship from the wider process of knowledge generation and stewardship.
Series
Queen Mary Journal of Intellectual Property ; Volume 15, Issue 2
Linked Resources
Published
[Northampton, England] : Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2025.
Language
English
Copyright Information
https://www.elgaronline.com/page/Conditions%20of%20use/terms-and-conditions
Record Appears in