<p>Students  who  submit  essays  to  Turnitin  might  find  their  essays  commodified  for  paid  plagiarism-checking  services  such  as  WriteCheck.</p>
	
    
	    Students  who  submit  essays  to  Turnitin  might  find  their  essays  commodified  for  paid  plagiarism-checking  services  such  as  WriteCheck.
The  application  is  developed  by  Turnitin—an  American  company  which  provides  plagiarism-detection  services  to  institutions  over  the  world,  including  the  University  of  Melbourne.  According  to  its  website,  WriteCheck  uses  the  same  technology  as  Turnitin,  and  can  identify  similarities  with  “600+  million  student  papers”  and  “60+  billion  current  and  archived  web  pages.”
The  plagiarism-checker  also  gives  an  automatic  grammar  check  during  its  plagiarism  detection  process,  and  provides  paid  online  essay-writing  tutoring  services.  Students  can  pay  for  up  to  five  essays  to  be  checked  at  a  time.
“Turnitin  and  WriteCheck  are  owned  and  operated  by  the  same  company  to  serve  different  audiences,”  said  Martin  Kelly,  the  international  marketing  manager  at  Turnitin’s  Australia  office.  “WriteCheck  was  developed  in  partnership  with  instructors  to  provide  students  a  formative  check  on  writing  before  submission.”
“The  service  is  most  often  used  for  group  assignments,  to  check  for  citation  accuracy  and  to  avoid  accidental  plagiarism  and  for  feedback  on  writing  and  grammar.”
Farrago  purchased  one  of  the  packages  for  our  own  testing.  We  collected  two  media  essays,  two  politics  essays  and  one  environment  report  written  in  the  last  two  years  by  UniMelb  students.  All  of  the  essays  received  grades  of  H2A  or  above.  While  one  media  essay  and  the  environment  report  were  untampered,  duplicated  or  paraphrased  Wikipedia  extracts  were  added  into  the  rest  of  materials.  Farrago  also  tested  one  English  essay  found  online  as  a  reference.
It  turned  out  that  all  the  essays  we  submitted,  including  the  untampered  originals  submitted  by  UniMelb  students,  displayed  high  similarities  to  other  essays  in  the  system,  although  WriteCheck  does  not  detail  the  original  sources.
On  the  WriteCheck  website,  the  company  describes  the  process  of  engaging  Australian  law  firm  Blake  Dawson  Waldron  to  ensure  that  their  use  of  student  work  complies  with  Australian  copyright  and  privacy  laws.  The  advice  claims  that  “it  is  highly  unlikely  (although  not  completely  inconceivable)  that  a  Court  would  consider  that  the  use  of  the  Turnitin  system  by  a  subscriber  to  the  service  in  Australia  would  infringe  a  student’s  copyright”.  The  advice  from  Blake  Dawson  Waldron  is  from  April,  2004.
Kelly  also  told  Farrago  that  Turnitin  has  taken  policies  to  ensure  Turnitin  respect  its  users’  data  privacy.
“We  provide  students,  instructors  and  institutional  clients  the  option  of  storing  papers  in  the  Turnitin  database,  within  a  private  repository  or  not  at  all  so  that  they  maintain  control  over  their  intellectual  property,”  said  Kelly.
Several  students  who  offered  their  papers  to  Farrago  for  testing  didn’t  see  a  serious  problem  with  the  service.  “I  don’t  care  if  they  have  my  finished  essay,”  said  one.  “I  just  don’t  want  what  would  effectively  be  someone  standing  over  my  shoulder  while  I  work.”  The  student  was  referring  to  Cadmus,  a  controversial  anti-plagiarism  software  that  the  University  has  been  trialling  to  potentially  replace  Turnitin  in  the  future.
However,  some  students  expressed  concerns  about  data  privacy.  “I  can  see  how  useful  it  can  be  from  a  student’s  perspective  to  see  to  what  extent  their  essay  is  plagiarised,  but  the  fact  that  they  are  able  to  essentially  sell  a  service  that  uses  my  data  and  assignments  that  I  have  spent  hours  and  hours  working  on;  I  can  see  how  it  would  make  people  uncomfortable,”  said  Jesse  Seeberg-Gordon,  one  of  the  students  who  offered  his  work  for  Farrago’s  testing.
One  UniMelb  lecturer  told  Farrago  about  their  concerns  with  the  Turnitin,  as  the  syste  could  subject  the  best  students  to  institutional anxieties.”“And in  doing  all  of  this,  it  appropriates  the  intellectual  labour  of  the  students  and  the  markers  only  to  sell  it  back,  at  a  premium,  to  the  University.”
The  lecturer  also  criticised  the  efficiency  of  software  like  Turnitin  in  identifying  plagiarism.
“Turnitin  is  essentially  ineffective:  it  catches  only  the  most  banal  form  of  plagiarism  (copy  and  pasting),  and  it  does  so  poorly.  Its  real  function,  I  suspect,  is  simply  a  training  in  subordination  to  our  new  algorithmic  masters.”
The  University  of  Melbourne  Student  Union  Education  Officer  Toby  Silcock  said  paid  plagiarism  checker  services  in  general  could  scam  students.
“It  looks  like  students  are  basically  being  rorted—that  Turnitin  is,  without  the  knowledge  or  consents  of  students,  selling  students’  essays  and  making  money  of  another  group  of  disadvantaged  students  who  are  afraid  of  plagiarising,”  said  Silcock.  He  also  said  the  University  should  take  action  on  protecting  students’  intellectual  property.
A  University  spokesperson  said  that  the  University  was  aware  of  the  WriteCheck  service  offered  by  Turnitin.  “The  University  takes  very  seriously  the  protection  of  students’  personal  data  and  all  new  tools  are  subject  to  privacy  impact  assessment  to  minimise  risks  and  ensure  compliance  with  relevant  privacy  laws,”  said  the  spokesperson.
“All  students  provide  their  consent  to  their  work  being  submitted  to  the  Turnitin  service  when  they  submit  assignments.  The  consent  thus  provided  includes  the  Turnitin–WriteCheck  service.
“While  Turnitin  is  a  commercial  service  and  the  University  itself  and  other  institutions  benefit  from  having  a  broad  corpus  of  data  within  the  Turnitin  similarity  dataset,  it  is  important  to  note  that  the  way  student  data  is  stored  within  the  corpus  data  set  makes  it  intrinsically  unidentifiable.”