Buzzmag.live is a website that copies-and-pastes articles, and then changes a few words in each paragraph.
Here's an article from October 14, 2020, titled "Cristiano Ronaldo Falls Victim To The Coronavirus."
Here's a Reuters article from October 13, 2020, titled "Cristiano Ronaldo tests positive for COVID-19"
Sample text from the Buzzmag.live article:
The 35-year-old forward is asymptomatic and is most likely to miss Wednesday’s UEFA Nations League game against Sweden as he self-isolates.
The federation added that the rest of the Portugal team had undergone tests as a result of Ronaldo testing positive, but they claimed that all tested negative and would be available for the Sweden match.
Sample text from the Reuters article:
The 35-year-old Juventus forward is asymptomatic and will miss Wednesday’s UEFA Nations League game against Sweden as he self-isolates.
The federation added that the rest of the Portugal squad had undergone tests as a result of Ronaldo’s positive, but that they had all tested negative and would be available for the Sweden match.
The homepage and articles on Buzzmag.live contain AdSense ads.
Some users on Reddit are spamming the site, but I didn't notice any of them gaining much traction. Here's user /u/Samanthabadra. The WHOIS page for buzzmag.ive indicates the registrant is from Gampaha, Sri Lanka.
4 comments:
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It's unsettling how easily content can be repurposed. Did you know websites sometimes just rearrange words? I remember once working on a school project, and another student almost copied my entire paragraph, slope unblocked just changing a few synonyms. I had to present evidence to the teacher to prove my original work. This situation with Buzzmag.live and the Reuters article seems strikingly similar, highlighting issues with plagiarism and journalistic integrity.
It's unfortunate to see websites like Buzzmag.live that simply copy and modify content without adding any real value. Originality matters, just like in games such as Cookie Clicker , where every click counts towards building something unique!
This is a blatant case of plagiarism! Buzzmag.live barely reworded the Reuters article. It's disappointing to see such lazy journalism. Makes you wonder what else they're copying. I bet even their website design probably came from somewhere else. They should focus on creating original content or risk going down like a poorly played round ofDrift Boss
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