One of the largest ethical challenges faced today is the use of the "Web 2.0" collaborative atmosphere. In the past, people were often judged on their individual work and ideas they contribute, but with the internet, computer users can easily plagiarize, share and "borrow" others ideas or works to claim as their own, or use the collaborative nature of Wikipedia, Facebook, blogs, and motorcycle forums to engage others for their input to what is supposed to be an individual effort, typically without the appropriate credit given to the source of said ideas. Legally, this raises concerns over copyright infringement or theft of other types of intellectual property. See the recent examples of lawsuits raised by both the RIAA and MPAA in regards to pirated music and movies. While those examples have been quite newsworthy, intellectual property is stolen or plagiarized and used everyday in many mundane examples like questions from college assignments students post on the internet. Due to the nature of these assignments and the noted apathy of many college professors, these small-scale intellectual thefts go unchecked and unnoticed - and will continue to do so until bullshit assignments stop being recycled by lazy professors, or hardline punishments are handed down to students who steal others' ideas. © 2011 JRMMiii