What’s ten letters, and is “the practice of taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as one’s own?”
The professional crossword-puzzle community is enjoying some unexpected (and unpleasant) time in the spotlight this week, after an excellent FiveThirtyEight story made public allegations of plagiarism against crossword editor Tony Parker, who runs puzzles for both USA Today and Universal Crossword, which is syndicated.
It’s alleged that Parker lifted not just words but key structural design elements multiple times from puzzles originally published in the New York Times (and other publications), sometimes from years earlier.
Parker denies the allegations, calling them “mere coincidence”, but other experts like Ben Tausig, editor of the American Values Club crossword, beg to differ. Tausig says the plagiarism is “a gross violation”, and worked with software engineer Saul Pwanson to build a crossword database that’s been able to precisely pinpoint how many of Parker’s crosswords are very similar to those of the New York Times, and how those similarities are rarely found in other major publications.
Here’s an example:
It’s a wild, wild story, so head over to FiveThirtyEight to catch the whole thing.
Comments
15 responses to “Plagiarism Scandal Rocks The Crossword Puzzle Scene”
This has to be the biggest scandal since Watergate-gate.
This makes me cross.
Word.
Word.
I don’t even have the words…
“I know words. I have the best words”.
– Donald Trump
There are going to be riots in the streets
He’s going down.
I hope they can get across it quickly.
The jig is up
This coming from a ‘journalist’ famous for making a living by copying and pasting other people’s work and calling them ‘articles’. Oh, the irony!
Saul Pwanson or Paul Swanson?
*gasp!* Say it ain’t so!
Capitalism.
I find it amusing that the example presented shouldn’t really have been in a crossword in the first place. “Get on one’s nerves” is missing the apostrophe, and any time you have to do that for it to fit, it’s a terrible answer!