Plagiarism and AI Content
Bitcointalk's anti-plagiarism enforcement is among the most aggressive on the internet. The community runs continuous scans, the mods enforce permabans, and AI-written content is increasingly flagged the same way.
Why the forum cares so much
Pre-2018 signature campaign farms ran on plagiarism. Bot networks would copy posts from Reddit, Stack Exchange, and abandoned blogs to bulk up account counts. The forum's signal-to-noise ratio collapsed.
Merit fixed part of it. Aggressive plagiarism detection fixes the rest.
How detection works
Community members (most famously LoyceV) maintain automated and manual plagiarism trackers. They:
- Run new posts through external search engines
- Compare structure + phrasing against known sources
- Flag posts that match other content too closely
- Publish findings in public threads
When a match is confirmed, the user usually gets:
- Public call-out with side-by-side comparison
- A negative trust feedback citing the plagiarism
- A permaban from a global moderator within days
There's no appeal that works. The evidence is unambiguous.
What counts as plagiarism
Do
- +Paraphrase ideas in your own words, citing sources
- +Quote sparingly with explicit attribution
- +Link to the original source for further reading
- +Add your own analysis on top of the source material
Don't
- −Copy-paste articles or other forum posts verbatim
- −Lightly reword copied text to evade detection
- −Translate foreign-language posts to English and claim authorship
- −Use AI to 'rewrite' someone else's writing — both layers get flagged
AI content
The same trackers flag AI-generated posts. AI text has detectable patterns: overuse of certain phrases, generic conclusions, missing first-person specifics. The forum doesn't ban AI assistance categorically — but posts that are entirely AI-generated and presented as your own are treated as plagiarism.
The reputation collateral
Plagiarism doesn't just get you banned. It poisons:
- Any earnings you've made (campaigns claw back payments)
- The accounts you may have helped earn merit
- Any future accounts you try to make (IP + browser fingerprint flagged)
The asymmetry is brutal. A few weeks of fake earnings vs. a permanent forum identity wipe.
What to write instead
The best forum writing is grounded in your experience:
- "When I tried this, here's what happened…"
- "I tested X and found Y…"
- "I disagree with the standard view because…"
- "I've used this tool for 6 months — here are the gotchas…"
Specific, first-person, sourced. Impossible to plagiarize because it's only yours.