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 2 years ago (edited)

@mrsokal - it's been posted on Hive in Bangla (with a different account) and posted on Steemit in English. So he's either running both accounts or plagiarised the original post from Hive. The original post is here - https://hive.blog/hive-190212/@mofijul/rh4r5r

I believe that sc08 should only be voting steemexclusive posts so I think that the sc08 vote should be removed.

Thank you very much for your work @the-gorilla!

You're welcome, it would be nice if the author replies but I suspect that won't happen now so I'll add a 🚩 label until we get an answer.

I think it's the most correct choice

Thank you so much for your work @the-gorilla. This post should not get support from our team. We will remove the vote soon. But when i checked plagiarism it was 100% plagiarism free as the user translated the post from Bengali language.

But i want to know that how can we know that one person is abusing the system in this way. He just tranlated the whole post from hive and make another publication in steemit. How can we catch this types of abuse.

Unfortunately, plagiarism tools are useless against translations. Oftentimes, you'll know when a post "feels wrong". In this case, the reference to "Hive" suggested the content had already been posted on that platform.

There are many different ways of proceeding then and this time, I searched Hive for the #cricket tag - https://hive.blog/created/cricket - at which point, it was fairly easy to find. As a native English speaker, it's often easier for me to find unusual phrases or terminology that isn't natural and this would suggest a translator or automated script from a video. Sometimes as a curator, you just need to trust yourself - if something feels wrong, then in all likelihood it is so don't vote on it.

Thanks for your advice. It was very helpful for me.

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