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Published byBernice Marshall Modified over 8 years ago
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Journalism Ethics
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Defamation Libel ▪ Published defamation of character (damage a person’s reputation) Slander ▪ Spoken or broadcast defamation of character
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Defamation In order for a reporter to be held libel in court, the material in question would have to: ▪ Imply commission of a crime ▪ Injure a person’s profession or job ▪ Imply a person has a disease ▪ Damage a person’s credit ▪ Imply a lack of chastity ▪ Indicate a lack of mental capacity ▪ Incite public ridicule or contempt
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Defamation Dangerous Words that Can Call for Libel/Slander Lawsuits: ▪ thief, swindler, loan shark, shoplifter, gangster ▪ incompetent, failure, quack, shyster ▪ wino, leper, has VD, AIDS ▪ unreliable, bankrupt, gambler, failure ▪ stud, immoral, mistress, hooker, streetwalker ▪ screwy, nutty, incompetent, strange, crazy ▪ phony, coward, hypocrite
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You can’t get in trouble for libel/slander if: ▪ The statement is true ▪ The statement is not your opinion ▪ You use a direct quote from an interviewee First Amendment grants freedom of speech and press (However, limits to these freedoms have been set and tested by several court cases). Defamation
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Plagiarism
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Is using other's ideas and words without clearly acknowledging the source of that information. Plagiarism
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Intellectual Property: The product of human intellect that is unique and un-obvious with some value in the marketplace. Plagiarism
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Actions That Might Be Seen As Plagiarism Deliberate PlagiarismPossible Accidental Plagiarism Buying, stealing, or borrowing a paper Hiring or asking someone to write your paper Copying from one source w/o citing (on purpose or by accident) Building on someone's ideas w/o citing Using the source too closely when paraphrasing
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