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I asked them (politely as you suggested) to add my name, move their ad to below the article (so it didn't look like I was endorsing it) OR alternately, remove the article from their site. I never heard back, but a few days later, the article had been taken down. Success! I wouldn't have minded the traffic, but I wanted to credited and properly represented. I was a bit shocked it happened, but judging from what you describe, it could have been a lot worse.
Thanks for the tips.
Together, we are stonger!
Vicki Flaugher, the original SmartWoman
Founder, SmartWomanGuides.com: How-to and Inspiration for the Beginning Female Entrepreneur.
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Last week I got Google Alert for my content from Blogger site. I sent the webmaster email and waited for 5 days, no response, then I sent another email and still waiting to hear from them.
What if the webmaster doesn't respond and its hosted by Blogger? Is there a way to report o Blogger this issue?
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I learnt my lesson and now write all of my content 100% original and I steal nothing. Haven't had any problems with people stealing my content yet. But thanks for the advice
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I thought about it as a 'free promotional method' - but since you put it that way, I start to feel uneasy about it!
Great tips and will put it into practice if scraping happened!
Thanks :)
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I simply wrote stuff so boring and unoriginal that noone would ever want to steal it,
unfortunately my article " the letter w typed 23,48 times" never really went viral like I hoped,
so my traffic still sucks
thanks and take care
bryan
Sometimes you just have to use a bigger stick!
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Luckily, I have Copyrights on both my advertising and my ebook. Most of the people that copied it - just did a simple copy and paste and made no attempt to even rewrite it.
They even included the testimonials. Most of time, they were using the copy to resell my ebook (which they don't have the resale or affiliate rights to) on Ebay and IOffer.com.
Ebay has been great about taking the auctions down and don't allow digital product sales anymore. IOffer.com has been speedy with my complaints as well.
But, recently, I had it copied again. I could not get a hold of the owner. His/Her e-mail was undeliverable which is not a surprise. I found out who the host was and lodged my first DMCA complaint.
I sent it by regular mail, which, mysteriously, never got delivered. Strike one. I then tried faxing my complaint, and the matter was resolved within a day.
I guess the point of this post is this. While you can't copyright every post, or prevent scraping entirely, you can make sure that advertising or ebooks that you sell are throughly protected.
Yes, I know that some of you assume that you can get a Google cache on your work, and that your Domain registration can help you create a timeline as to when your site was established.
Anything that you create for your site or blog is assumed to be copyrighted automatically. But, for concrete proof, you would be best served by using the TX Short Form from the copyright office
Copyright Office.
I spent the 33 dollars for both my advertising and my ebook, for a grand total of 66 dollars. The copyright office is like clockwork. Within six months almost to the day, they sent me my certificate. Probably one of the most effiicent government agencies I have dealt with!
For the future, and with more research, I am going to look into disabling the cut & paste feature with some Javascript. However, I am not sure if that will inhibit the ability of spiders from crawling my front page as well.
Personal anecdotes aside, if you can afford to do it, get Uncle Sam's protection on anything that is a constant "workhorse" for your site, i.e., advertising, printed, or digital publications..
Thats my rant..
Robert The Wholesale Products Guy
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I find a lot of the content scrapers actually link back to me, which is not ideal but acceptable. As long as they link, Google should hopefully (or eventually) get it right.
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-Kevin
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Just make sure you own your content, i.e., you are the copyright owner. If you commission content from freelancers, they own it, not you, even if you've paid them (you just have an implicit license to use it). You cannot file the DMCA notification unless you own it or have a limited power of attorney or agency appointment for copyright matters from the owner. The easiest thing is to just own it. So always have a written contract transferring copyright in exchange for valuable consideration (the payment).
In the United States, a person who writes anything automatically has a copyright to it--no one else may use it without permission. This is not true in all countries.
As far as I know, you can simply state your name, the copyright symbol and the year on the page to assert copyright. To prove originality, many people send themselves a copy of what they've written via registered mail and don't open the letter. Just file it with a plain old printed copy and you have proof of the date on which (or before which) you wrote the piece. You can also formally register your copyright for a fee.
As a freelance writer working through Elance, I can testify to the amount of scraping going on. It's very hard to stop. Worse, there are article "spinning" programs that change the content of an article just enough to fool plagiarism checkers such as Copyscape. IMHO, this is illegal, unless the person who holds the copyright on the paper gives permission to use it in this way.
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