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Web Plagiarism

Catching code copied from the web, GitHub and Stack Overflow, and protecting your own site's source.

How Much Copied Stack Overflow Code Do Plagiarism Tools Actually Catch General 10 min
Alex Petrov Alex Petrov 1 day ago

How Much Copied Stack Overflow Code Do Plagiarism Tools Actually Catch

Traditional similarity tools like MOSS and JPlag compare student submissions against each other but leave a massive blind spot: code copied directly from Stack Overflow, GitHub repositories, and online tutorials. This article examines how web source detection works, what it catches that peer comparison misses, and why both approaches together give you the real picture of code originality.

The Invisible Theft of Your Website's Core Logic General 6 min
Rachel Foster Rachel Foster 2 months ago

The Invisible Theft of Your Website's Core Logic

While everyone watches for stolen CSS and JavaScript, a more insidious theft is happening at the server layer. Our analysis of 500 flagged enterprise codebases reveals that 34% contained verbatim backend logic lifted from competitor sites or leaked repositories. This isn't about aesthetics—it's about stealing business rules, authentication flows, and data models. The tools designed to catch student plagiarism are blind to it.

Your Website's HTML Was Stolen Yesterday General 5 min
David Kim David Kim 2 months ago

Your Website's HTML Was Stolen Yesterday

The code that makes your website unique is a prime target for theft. From entire HTML templates to critical JavaScript functions, web plagiarism is rampant and often invisible. This guide shows you where to look and how to fight back, protecting your intellectual property and your competitive edge.

Your Codebase Is a Patchwork of Stolen Web Snippets General 9 min
James Okafor James Okafor 2 months ago

Your Codebase Is a Patchwork of Stolen Web Snippets

Your developers aren't writing code. They're assembling it from a thousand forgotten browser tabs. The average codebase contains hundreds of unlicensed, unvetted, and potentially dangerous snippets copied directly from the web. This isn't just about plagiarism—it's about technical debt, security vulnerabilities, and legal liability woven directly into your application's DNA.

Your Codebase Is Full of Stolen Web Snippets General 8 min
Emily Watson Emily Watson 2 months ago

Your Codebase Is Full of Stolen Web Snippets

A developer copies a slick animation from CodePen. Another integrates a jQuery plugin from a blog. These everyday acts are quietly filling your codebase with unlicensed, potentially toxic code. This guide shows you how to find it, assess the risk, and clean it up before it triggers a legal notice.

Your Website's JavaScript Was Stolen Last Month General 8 min
Dr. Sarah Chen Dr. Sarah Chen 3 months ago

Your Website's JavaScript Was Stolen Last Month

A competitor's new feature looks suspiciously like yours. The JavaScript is minified, the variable names are changed, but the logic is identical. This is web code plagiarism, and it's rampant. Here’s how to prove it happened and what you can do about it, using a forensic approach that goes beyond simple string matching.

Your Website's CSS Was Stolen Last Week General 5 min
Alex Petrov Alex Petrov 3 months ago

Your Website's CSS Was Stolen Last Week

Web code plagiarism isn't just about student assignments. It's a rampant, costly problem for businesses. Competitors routinely lift unique CSS, JavaScript architectures, and even entire page structures. Here’s how to find out if it’s happening to you and what to do about it.

Your Codebase Is Full of Stolen Web Snippets General 7 min
David Kim David Kim 3 months ago

Your Codebase Is Full of Stolen Web Snippets

A developer copies a slick animation from Stack Overflow. Another pulls a "helper function" from a random GitHub repo. This is how technical debt and legal liability silently enter your codebase. We map the seven most common—and dangerous—patterns of web code plagiarism in professional software.