> I mean, even in the real world there is something call "fair use" where you're allowed to copy excerpts from proprietary documents/media.

This is important to address, because it is a common confusion. "Fair use" is defense against copyright infringement. **Plagiarism is distinct from copyright infringement.** You could raise a successful fair use defense against a copyright infringement claim, and yet still be deemed to have plagiarized.

Simple example. Alice writes an article in the school's newspaper in which she copies three consecutive sentences out of a 200 page book written by Bob, without attribution (no quotes, no name, nothing):

1. Copyright: if Bob were to want to raise a copyright claim, fair use would be in Alice's favor. She did not copy a whole chapter, it is unlikely that people would buy the newspaper *instead of* buying Bob's book, etc.

2. Plagiarism: This is flat out plagiarism. She did not attribute the copied passage to Bob. It does not matter *one bit* if a court found that it was fair use.

(You also open a whole different can of worms with the term "proprietary", but I'm going to just say that if you think "fair use" is a defense if you leak a little bit of *proprietary* information, you're in for a nasty surprise.)

So if you see something and think "well, this cannot be plagiarism because it is allowed by fair use", well, that's just plain wrong.