Plagiarism Trackers
The forum's anti-plagiarism enforcement is largely community-run. A small group of dedicated members maintains continuous scans, publishes findings in public threads, and submits permaban-worthy cases to mods. Understanding how the trackers work matters for two reasons: you don't want to get caught in them, and you want to know how to use them defensively.
How detection works
The trackers combine several techniques:
- Search-engine matching — posts get queried against Google/Bing to find verbatim or near-verbatim hits
- N-gram analysis — sequences of 5-8 words checked against known content
- Stylometric anomaly detection — sudden writing-style shifts flag accounts
- Cross-source matching — Reddit, Medium, Stack Exchange, Wikipedia are common copy sources
- LLM-output fingerprinting — emerging tools flag posts with telltale AI patterns
When matches are found, the tracker thread posts:
- Link to the offending forum post
- Link to the original source
- Side-by-side comparison
The dedicated threads
LoyceV runs the most prominent plagiarism-tracking thread. There are also language-specific trackers in some local boards. They publish weekly digests of catches.
What this means for you
As a poster:
- Write original content in your own words
- If you paraphrase, cite the source explicitly
- Don't run text through "AI rewriters" hoping to evade detection — fingerprinting catches it
- Translation of others' content without attribution = plagiarism
As a community member:
- If you spot plagiarism, post in the tracker threads with full evidence
- Don't accuse without side-by-side proof — vague accusations get challenged + dismissed
- Use the trackers to verify a counterparty's writing is genuinely theirs
Penalties
For confirmed plagiarism:
- Negative trust feedback from the tracker (with reference)
- Often global moderator review → permaban
- Campaign managers remove the user from current campaigns + claw back payments
- IP / browser fingerprint often flagged for future detection
The penalties are severe because the community decided plagiarism was an existential threat to forum content quality.
Defensive use
Before partnering, hiring, or trusting an apparently-knowledgeable user:
- Search a phrase from one of their notable posts in quotes
- If it hits an external source, you've found a plagiarist
- Cross-reference: do they have a tracker mention already?
3-minute check that's saved many community members from working with plagiarists.
AI content specifically
The tracker community's position on AI-generated content has hardened. Pure AI output presented as original work is treated the same as copy-paste plagiarism. AI-assisted writing where the user clearly contributes substantive thinking is generally accepted.
The line: AI as a tool that you steer is fine. AI as a substitute for thinking you don't do is not.