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How to check if my custom research paper is not put up for sale?


Plesk  1 | 1   Student
Oct 11, 2012 | #1
If I order custom research from a company or a writer, how do I track it was not resold or put up for sale later? I can Google some words, but there are sites that block Google. But my tutor may still login and find my work is sold not under my name. Then I'm in big trouble.

How to prevent it from happening?
forumregulator  1 | 162  
Oct 11, 2012 | #2
How to prevent it from happening?

If your assignment is resold to another student who submits it via turnitin before you, then you are in trouble because the paper will turn out 100% plagiarized. Dealing with this is both a matter of good choice and good luck in the sense that you are never fully in control of what a company or writer will do once your transaction is complete. And forget about violation of contracts because once your paper is flagged as plagiarized you cannot explain yourself out of it by citing an agreement you had with a third party about your purchased paper not being resold.
OP Plesk  1 | 1   Student
Oct 11, 2012 | #3
Thank you. So the solution is....?
forumregulator  1 | 162  
Oct 11, 2012 | #4
So the solution is....?

good choice and good luck

FreelanceWriter  6 | 3089   ☆☆☆   Freelance Writer
Oct 11, 2012 | #5
Thank you. So the solution is....?

The solution is to use the search function of this forum to identify those companies whose TOS specifically indicate that they never resell your work and those companies that purposely wait at least 3-6 months to resell the papers under their rights to do so according to their TOS. If you use one of the latter, the only way you might run into problems is if you order an essay several months before you actually need it.
andywoods57  1 | 86   Freelance Writer
Oct 12, 2012 | #6
I don't think any tutor checks the assignment again after submission and evaluating the paper.
Smiley73  4 | 591 ☆☆  
Oct 02, 2017 | #7
Sale ResearchSome professors who are actually trying to make their students learn something practice due diligence and check the content of the paper for plagiarism before he actually evaluates the paper for a grade. That is what these plagiarism checker software is for.

Most universities even have their own database of essays these days where professors can automatically submit the papers for counter checking against previously written papers. While these will only offer similarity rates, the rate of similarity will trigger a question of plagiarism or a paper sold to a new student. That is why it is always best to hire a company that turns over the rights to the paper to student upon submission.

From my experience though, the companies do wait about a year before they resell the paper to another student. That is, after having the paper undergo a severe revision process within the company. If you are worried about the possibility of your paper being put up for sale or if you have purchased an old paper, then it would be better for you to consider writing the paper yourself. That way, if the paper has any problems, you won't have anyone to blame but yourself and you won't feel scammed in the end.
writologist  1 | 32   Freelance Writer
Oct 02, 2017 | #8
If I order custom research from a company or a writer,. Then I'm in big trouble.

You must be careful always... Finding one trusted and loyal writer and building a working relationship is always the solution. Companies violate the rights of writers through unwarranted penalties and under compensation. In return, some of these writers put the content online. The client ends up suffering for no reason. In my opinion, build a long-term relationship with one of the writers.. He/she will have to be stupid to screw you over.

I am one of the loyal writers, just in case you may need my services. Cheers!
ProfessorVerb  35 | 829   ☆☆   Freelance Writer
Oct 03, 2017 | #9
"Writolgist" is a cool name and I absolutely agree that building relationships is central to success in this industry. Anyone who subjects themselves to penalties or fines of any kind, though, is just setting themselves up for failure. Fine me for doing my best? **** you. **** you twice. More to the point, reputable companies will never invoke negative reinforcements like that (good grief). For what it's worth, you can hire one of the reputable writers who advertise in here or the best company in the biz today, SNR.
writologist  1 | 32   Freelance Writer
Oct 03, 2017 | #10
"Writolgist" is a cool name

I appreciate it, bro. And true, clients need to start dealing with writers directly--and maybe even owning a pool of quality writers. As much as they need work completed by custom writers, they also need consistency and continuity. It is the best strategy that I could have used was I in any of their shoes. Simply put, identify a good writer/ a few good writers and stick with him/her/them!
Major  35 | 1449 ☆☆  
Oct 03, 2017 | #11
Clients to own a pool of writers, how?
wordsies  5 | 389     Freelance Writer
Oct 03, 2017 | #12
Isn't slavery illegal?
writers2beware  29 | 1712 ☆☆  
Oct 04, 2017 | #13
ESL gibberish at its finest . . . .
ProfessorVerb  35 | 829   ☆☆   Freelance Writer
Oct 05, 2017 | #14
Now THAT sounds like a challenge.
writologist  1 | 32   Freelance Writer
Oct 07, 2017 | #15
Clients to own a pool of writers, how?

By that, I meant having a list of preferred writers on quick dial. Folks, this thing isn't that complex, or is it?!
Major  35 | 1449 ☆☆  
Oct 07, 2017 | #16
Explaining research requirements over the phone would take a lot of time and patience, so most of the times it wouldn't be quick.
ProfessorVerb  35 | 829   ☆☆   Freelance Writer
Oct 07, 2017 | #17
Over the past 20+ years I've been in this industry, I can count the number of clients I've spoken with over the phone on one hand. It is my conclusion that if you can't tell me what you want and need in an email, it ain't possible.
writologist  1 | 32   Freelance Writer
Oct 08, 2017 | #18
Explaining research requirements over the phone

And you took it quite literally! This s--t is becoming difficult. By 'speed dial,' I meant having a list of 'run-to' writers (their emails of course), who one would consider for completion of personal projects. It is based on quality, trust, and most importantly, continuity. Having two or three of such writers is more than enough. When one is buried in too much work--especially during the peak season, it becomes easier to try the other on the list. You dig?
wordsies  5 | 389     Freelance Writer
Oct 08, 2017 | #19
The only problem with your logic is that any decent writer will also be buried with work. Trust me, I've tried. Can't remember the number of times I tried to offload some of my stuff, or others do the same and we were all up to our necks. The clients would just circle around.
Write Review  1 | 546 ☆☆  
Feb 09, 2019 | #20
The first way you can prevent the resale of your paper is by dealing either with a direct independent writer or, hiring a non-third world writing company to complete your paper. Review the Terms of Service of the company or discuss the rights agreement with your direct writer. Make sure that the rights to the paper are turned over to you fully before you hire either service. Get the agreement in electronic contract form if you can. By tying either party to an agreement, you might be able to prolong the potential resale of your paper. Normally though, above board companies and trusted writers will never pull the wool over your eyes to resell your paper at a later date.

The other, foolproof method to make sure that your paper does not get resold is, as @Smiley73 said, for you to personally write the paper. The only time your paper will be resold in this case would be if you decide to do so at a later date.
FreelanceWriter  6 | 3089   ☆☆☆   Freelance Writer
Feb 10, 2019 | #21
Probably the only way to check would be to visit the site from which you ordered it and see whether they sell pre-written projects; and if they do, enter the title and/or keywords related to the subject matter into the search field that their customers use to see what pre-written projects are available for sale. That's likely to be only partly reliable, because some companies maintain dozens of different websites and there's no guarantee that they resell projects on the same website from which they were originally ordered. More likely than not, they don't; so you'd have to try to figure out what other websites the parent company identified on the TOS page owns, which isn't necessarily easy (or possible at all), at least not without investing a lot of time and resources into that endeavor. If your project has an abstract, you could try Googling sentences from it or submitting it to plagiarism scanners. Sometimes, those companies use the actual abstract from the project to advertise it, but other times, they add new abstracts for that purpose.

Since, it's very difficult (if not impossible) to safeguard your ownership of projects after the fact to any reliable degree, your best bet would be to use writers or companies who never resell any projects and/or transfer copyright to their customers. Don't be afraid to ask about that; and understand that if their TOS specifically say that they do not transfer ownership and/or that the company retains copyright and ownership of all of its projects, there's absolutely nothing you can do about the fact that they may choose to resell your project even if they tell you that they don't. If you're searching on this forum, you might try to enter the term "resell" into the search function and the ID of any writer to see what that person has previously stated publicly about whether or not he or she resells projects. As always, change the default "titles" to "messages" to avoid accidentally limiting your search returns to threads mentioning the ID you're researching in the thread title.

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Cite  2 | 1853 ☆☆☆  
Apr 04, 2020 | #22
While my company and my writers do not offer papers for resale, I could see why some writers and companies would engage in the practice. However, the practice should only take effect within 4 years of writing the paper. That way the student will have already graduated and the potential for the professor to double check the paper would have been minimized. A student should not be checking for the resale of a paper so early in the game. No writer or company will resell the paper so soon after submitting it to the student. For all intents and purposes, the intellectual property for the paper still lies with the student. That is why the student should make sure to check the TOS for a potential expiration date on the rights to the paper. Some companies include a reference to the rights reverting to the company for the resale of the paper sometimes. If a student is not sure about the rights to the content of the paper, then, it will never hurt to ask the company and keep documentation regarding that conversation.
FreelanceWriter  6 | 3089   ☆☆☆   Freelance Writer
Apr 06, 2020 | #23
Likewise, my customers own anything that they pay me to write for them and I've never even considered reselling any project for which I've already been paid by the customer who ordered it. The FAQs and TOS of most essay companies say nothing about reselling projects. Almost all of their FAQs specifically state that the company retains ownership and all rights to all of the projects that they provide and they also expressly prohibit customers from ever claiming ownership of the work. More often than not, they prohibit customers from doing anything with their work besides reading it as a learning tool and "citing" the essay company (by name) as a "source" in any academic project in which the customer chooses to use any material from the project. If the company retains ownership to the work, they can do whatever they want with it and you should assume that includes reselling it. .




Forum / General Talk / How to check if my custom research paper is not put up for sale?