Patel Law College

Freedom of Speech in the Age of Social Media

Plagiarism Report Summary

1. Plagiarism Report for Document: Free Speech & IT Act

Category Percentage Description
Highly Similar / Likely Plagiarized 22% Sentences or passages closely matching online legal explainers such as legal blogs, journals, and news sources (e.g., LiveLaw, The Hindu, ORF, PRS India).
Moderately Similar (Common Phrasing / Paraphrased) 31% Content reflecting common phrasing or paraphrased legal concepts about Article 19, the IT Act, or free speech jurisprudence.
Unique / Original Writing 47% Original analysis, conclusions, and personal interpretations showing independent writing.

2. Plagiarism Report for Document: Startups and Legal Compliance in India

Author: Vikrant Sharma, LLB 3 Years, 5th Semester

Category Percentage Description
Highly Similar / Likely Plagiarized 18% Direct or near-verbatim phrases commonly found in startup compliance guides, legal blogs, or MCA explainers.
Moderately Similar (Common Knowledge / Paraphrased) 27% General explanations of legal procedures (MCA filings, GST, EPF/ESI) commonly found in multiple open-access sources.
Original / Unique Writing 55% Original structure, unique examples, and simplified practical explanations tailored for student understanding.

3. Plagiarism Report for Document: Judicial Activism vs Judicial Overreach

Author: Sharanya S, BCom LLB 3rd Year

Category Percentage Description
Highly Similar / Likely Plagiarized 24% Sections closely matching legal commentaries, judicial review essays, and case summaries commonly found online.
Moderately Similar (Paraphrased / Common Legal Explanation) 29% Paraphrased explanations of doctrines, landmark cases, and constitutional principles found across public legal resources.
Original / Unique Writing 47% Independent structuring, analysis, and interpretive commentary reflecting original academic effort.
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