During this digital age, pirates are thought to be an
ancient way of life that we learn about through bed time stories. This is
clearly not the case as the radio interview we heard in class and the plagiarizing
article state. Instead of stealing treasure from ships and attacking people
with swords on epic war ships, people all over the world are stealing songs,
pieces of songs and claiming other academic works as their own. During the
radio interview, the show host and his guests combated constant opinions on whether
or not remixing a famous song is considered art or piracy. The same arguments are
being made and vainly used in an attempt to mask the lazy antics of students nationwide
when it comes to creating an honest scholarly article. Within the plagiarism
article is plethora of attacks towards those individuals with no morals or work
ethic. The universities are constantly combating the plagiarism and blatant
disrespect that comes with that offence. Unlike the devastating seriousness of plagiarism,
the remixes discussed in the radio interview are thought of as creativity at its
finest instead of a criminal act by those who do it. The only opposition that
the covering artists have is those people in which only desire to make as much
money as possible from the products. The main argument against those artists
who create the remixes is none other than the fact that they potentially jeopardize
the musical integrity and quality of the original artist’s track. To many
people it seems a feeble excuse to stop the endless ocean of imagination that
lies within those who create masterpieces from all of those around them. Like
many disagreements in this world, who owns what is a seemingly un ending
contradiction that will always plague those with a love and desire to pursue
something with no remorse.
Haha. Nice reference to pirates. And good use of the world "plethora".
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