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41 cases of plagiarism at BuzzFeed, Benny Johnson fired

BuzzFeed fired one of its editors, Benny Johnson, after finding 41 cases of plagiarism in his articles.

BuzzFeed editor Ben Smith published a lengthy apology and explanation to readers July 25.

Smith said BuzzFeed reviewed “more than 500 of Benny’s posts” after readers noticed Johnson, the Viral Politics editor, had been taking content without attribution from other sites.

Johnson’s work came under scrutiny earlier this week after “two pseudonymous Twitter users pointed out” Johnson “periodically lifted text from a variety of sources—Wikipedia, U.S. News & World Report, a random press release—all without credit,” Gawker reported.

At first BuzzFeed responded by standing by Johnson and adding corrections to the articles acknowldging they originally had improper attribution.

But late last night, BuzzFeed’s Smith publicly apologized and announced Johnson’s firing:

“We owe you, our readers, an apology. This plagiarism is a breach of our fundamental responsibility to be honest with you — in this case, about who wrote the words on our site. Plagiarism, much less copying unchecked facts from Wikipedia or other sources, is an act of disrespect to the reader. We are deeply embarrassed and sorry to have misled you.”

BuzzFeed’s Smith accepted responsibility for the lapse and listed all 41 articles contained plagiarism. He added that BuzzFeed removed the plagiarism from the articles and posted editor’s notes explaining the changes.

One such editor’s note, on the Jan 25, 2013 article “7 Miracle Babies to Warm Your Heart Today,” reads:

“This post has been corrected to remove phrasing that was copied from the site Baby Said What, from which the structure of the list was also copied.

“BuzzFeed takes its responsibility to readers very seriously, and plagiarism is a major breach of that responsibility. Please read our apology to readers here.”

In a memo to BuzzFeed staff from Smith, published by Gawker, Smith further explained the firing of Johnson.

“This pattern is not a minor slip,” Smith wrote. “This is a breach of faith with our readers; a violation of a basic rule of writing; and the reflection of an unserious attitude to our work that is wildly out of line with both our standards and our ambition.”

Interestingly, the Washington Post noted, earlier this week, Johnson tweeted about plagiarism himself.

 

 

iMediaEthics received an auto-response from Johnson’s BuzzFeed e-mail account saying he is “no longer with BuzzFeed.” We’ve reached out to him via Facebook and Twitter for comment.

UPDATE: 7/26/2014 12:13 PM EST Johnson tweeted apologizing.