The Wrynose Pass in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria England

in #wrynose4 years ago (edited)

The unusual name of the pass is taken from that of the adjacent Wrynose hill, also called Wrynose Fell. The name was recorded in 12th-century documents as "Wrenhalse" and in the 16th century as "Wrenosse Hill". It is thought, based on a suggestion by Eilert Ekwall, to mean "stallion's ridge", being formed on the Old Norse words reini ("stallion", probably here used as a byname for an individual), and hala. It is one of a number of place names of Scandinavian origin in the area. Although most academic sources characterise "Vreini" in this context as a personal name, it has also been explained as suggesting "the horse power needed to climb it". Other suggested origins are from Old Norse ravn hals, "pass of the raven", and wreye nes, the "twisted headland". Over the years, the name has been altered to the form "Wrynose" through folk etymology, though it is still locally pronounced "Wreynuss", much like its older form (source) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrynose_Pass
lakes road.jpg

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Source of plagiarism

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this is my own image

Have you been on their Discord? Unfortunately we have to deal with a lot of plagiarism on Hive and those who hunt it down need proof.

There's also the issue that some people will think a low effort post (a single picture with text sourced from elsewhere) is not worth much in rewards.

I've been down the pass by car and it's quite a drive.

The account is not blacklisted yet. The downvotes were given on various posts as reprimands for the above plagiarism (the curation on other posts was not completely removed).

Is taking stuff from Wikipedia considered that bad? She did acknowledge the source here, but maybe that was done later. The heavy downvotes seem a little severe in my opinion, but is that under your control? In this case we have someone who does have original content, but may not be presenting it in the best way. What may be acceptable on FB is not considered worthy of rewards here. We do not want to scare people away if they have something to contribute, so a delicate approach is needed. I'm trying to guider her to a better path, but as with you my time is limited.

It does not matter where the plagiarised writing comes from. Wikipedia, Encyclopedia, blog, science article, etc. They are all considered equally. Just because the writing was stolen from Wikipedia and not from scientific articles, does not make the plagiarism and intention of plagiarism different.
We always prioritize stolen writing over images/photography. It also depends what is the main highlight of the post.
I will remove the downvotes on these posts.

Thanks.

Wikipedia has a permissive licence and so people are not breaching that by copying text. People can also take images from sites that allow that (sometimes requiring acknowledgement). What we don't want on Hive is users passing off the work of others as their own and I know that happens a lot.

@amy-explores did you follow this? Expectations on Hive can be different to other platforms due to the potential to earn and it is up to the community to deal with issues. Please keep posting, but ensure the emphasis is on your original content with any material from others sources properly acknowledged.