Physics_wiz said:
I was told that a college professor got kicked out of the college because he referred to work in a book THAT HE WROTE and didn't reference himself (Not sure if it is true, but I heard it from a reliable source). How rediculous is that?
I don't think you can plagiarize yourself. However, you could still get in trouble for copyright violations. In other words, the story might be partially true, but I'd be surprised if the consequences were him being fired.
John Fogerty had to stop singing the Credence Clearwater Revival songs that he wrote just for this reason (plus pay a substantial sum to his old recording company and ex-bandmembers). Even though he wrote the songs, the band, as a whole, had sold the rights to the songs to the recording company that produced their albums.
Isaac Asimov had a similar problem with the Foundation Trilogy, which he originally wrote as a series of short stories. But in that case, it was no problem for the new publisher to purchase the rights from the old publisher, since the old publisher had put so little effort into the stories and they weren't yielding any money for the old company. But, Asimov still didn't own the rights to those stories - his new publisher did. He got a considerably better deal on the sequels.
My favorite plagiarism myth is the one about the professor who gives a student an "A" for a plagiarised paper with the comment "When I originally wrote this paper 20 years ago, my professor only gave me a 'C'. I felt it was long overdue that my paper finally was given the grade it deserved, even if to the wrong student."
It's doubtful, at best, but the TV show "Welcome Back, Kotter" used a twist on this story when Kotter recognizes that Epstein's paper is a copy of the same one Kotter turned in while in high school. Instead of failing Epstein for plagiarism, he makes Epstein redo the paper, commenting to his wife, ""I said I turned that paper in myself; I never said I wrote it."