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Stop Thief! How You Can Fight Back Against Online
Plagiarism
Its ironic that this article about plagiarism
will probably be stolen and illegally published on many
websites across the world! Thats the nature of
the web, but can you do anything about it? How can you
fight back?
This article provides you with some tactics and actions
to get back at content thieves who are abusing the web
and copyright laws.
Why do people steal content?
The number one reason that people steal online content
is so they can make money from advertising. They will
take your article and put it on a webpage on their websites.
They will then place advertising on the page, which
earns them money. The most common adverts, by virtue
of their ease of implementation, are Google AdSense
ads. People simply add a piece of code to the webpage
and relevant ads are automatically displayed alongside
the content. Every time a visitor to the page clicks
on an ad, the website owner earns a small commission.
If someone has thousands or even millions of pages of
content showing these ads, the earnings can be very
significant.
Content is expensive and time consuming to create,
so it is far easier for these website owners to steal
it, particularly as the risk of getting caught is so
low.
Who is stealing the content?
The majority of thieves are amateurs who are trying
to earn a bit of cash on the side. They use such simple,
cheap website creation tools as Blogger, TypePad, Homestead
or Moonfruit to quickly create websites that they populate
with content they cut and paste from sites around the
Internet. Or, easier still, they take RSS feeds
from sites and have the content automatically delivered
to their new sites.
Whilst most the thieves are amateurs, they are not
the biggest problem.
The sums of money that can now be earned from online
advertising have attracted the attention of far more
organised gangs. New tools have been developed that
can strip thousands of articles from legitimate sites
and use them to populate thousands of websites. Some
of these tools are programmed to change words within
each page so they are harder for the author to trace.
This has become known as synonymizing.
These professional content thieves dont care
what they are stealing and from whom (although they
avoid plagarising articles from the bigger news agencies
and newspaper and broadcasting sites).
What content gets stolen?
Anything and everything! Sometimes whole sites are
stolen and recreated with a new domain name.
The most commonly stolen stuff is short text articles,
such as blog posts. There are thousands of them,
many of which are distributed via RSS. They are perfect
for driving targeted traffic and thus ad clicks.
Next are images. Why? Because they are difficult
and expensive to create, yet very easy to steal.
Many image thieves actually leave the pictures on the
original server and link to them so they dont
have to foot the bill for hosting!
Some distance behind these two content types are marketing
copy, web-design elements (templates, buttons, icons,
etc.), video, blocks of code and web applications (e.g.
an online mortgage calculator).
How do you find your stolen content?
If you want to find out whether your articles have
been copied, the cheapest and easiest way to do it is
to copy and paste a unique line from the article into
several search engines try Google, Yahoo and
Ask. There is a good chance that if that line appears
verbatim on another site it will be found.
Alternatively, there is a dedicated service that
can help, called Copyscape (www.copyscape.com). You
can use a restricted but effective version for free,
and if you like what you see, you can pay a nominal
amount for the premium service. Copyscape looks for
copies of all your website content across the web.
Searching for stolen images is much harder. The easiest
technique is to give every image a distinctive and unique
file name. Thieves usually dont bother changing
the file name, so you can undertake a search using Google
Image search to locate pinched pictures.
The only other way is to ask your loyal visitors to
notify you if they see any of your content published
on other websites. They can be your team of unpaid copyright
police.
Fighting back! How to get content thieves to remove
your content
First let me set your expectations straight. Very often
you cannot get your content removed from other peoples
websites however hard you try, so you need to decide
how much time you are going to spend pursuing thieves
and not get obsessed by the process. It can become very
time consuming, frustrating and demoralising. If you
do decide to pursue the culprit(s) make sure you keep
a detailed paper trail of everything you do and all
of the correspondence.
So here are seven tactics you can use to pursue
and outwit the thief:
Tactic #1 Ask them to remove your content.
If you can find out who runs the website on which
the stolen content appears and you can find away of
contacting them, the first thing you should do is simply
ask them to remove it. If they are amateur thieves this
might be enough.
Tactic #2 Cease and desist letter. If
your first request receives no response and the content
remains on the website, you can step up the pressure
by sending them a cease and desist letter. I recommend
sending an email and a physical letter (if you can find
a postal address). You can often find this information
out by doing a Whois search (try www.nominet.org.uk
for .co.uk domains or www.networksolutions.com/whois/index.jsp
for .com/.net domains). A cease and desist letter
is often enough to scare the amateur thief. However,
it is unlikely to deter the professional gang.
For example cease and desist and DMCA letters go to
http://performancing.com/legal-issues/stock-letters
Tactic #3 Do some research to find out who
is hosting the website. You can find this out by
doing a Whois search (try www.nominet.org.uk
for .co.uk domains or www.networksolutions.com/whois/index.jsp
for .com/.net domains). In the US under the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act (1998) and the UK under the
European Union Copyright Directive (2003), you can contact
the hosting company, explain that the site is breaching
your copyright and request that the site be taken down.
Sometimes you wont get a reply; often you will
get asked to provide additional information. Rarely,
they will agree straight away and act on your behalf.
Tactic #4 Report the site to its advertisers.
As mentioned above, most stolen content is used to drive
traffic to pages with adverts so the website owner can
make money from advertising. Most of these websites
use Google AdSense because it is very easy to set up.
In the AdSense terms and conditions, as with those of
most reputable ad networks, it is very clear that ads
must not be served against stolen content. Send the
advertisers copies of the cease and desist letters that
you have forwarded to the offending webmaster. If the
website loses its ability to serve ads, it will have
lost its reason to exist.
Tactic #5 Report the site to the major search
engines. Content sites without traffic from the
major search engines are like fish without water. Without
the oxygen of free traffic they wither and die. Whilst
getting a site blocked in a search engine will not get
your article removed, it will ensure that it is hard
for other people to find. You can report the copyright
infringement to all of the major search engines, and
within their terms and conditions, they are obliged
to act. The key search engines to report to are Google,
Yahoo and Microsoft/MSN.
Google: http://www.google.com/dmca.html#notification
Yahoo: http://info.yahoo.com/copyright/details.html
Microsoft/MSN:http://search.msn.com/docs/siteowner.aspx?t=SEARCH_WEBMASTER_CONC_AboutDMCA.htm
How to send notification to the search engines:
http://www.seologic.com/faq/dmca-notifications.php
Tactic #6 Take them to court. If your content
is registered as copy-protected material, you can file
a lawsuit against the thief. Youll need to take
expert legal advice before going down this route.
Conclusion
Content theft is a growing problem on the web, and
it is difficult to see how it will ever be prevented.
If you find yourself a victim and you want to take action
against the thief or thieves, use the tactics outlined
above. They can be effective deterrents against the
majority of amateur content thieves. Dont do anything
illegal in your pursuit or it could be you who ends
up the wrong side of the law.
Useful articles and websites:
Detailed article about dealing with content theft:
http://lorelle.wordpress.com/2006/04/10/what-do-you-do-when-someone-steals-your-content/
Site dedicated to dealing with content plagiarism:
www.plagiarismtoday.com
Useful Resource to Detect Copyright Theft
Copyscape: www.copyscape.com
The Copyscape website helps you detect thefts of
your articles. You simply insert your URL into the Copyscape
search box and it scans the web to see if any of your
articles are published on other websites. You can then
go through the search results and look at the sites
it has identified. If you have been publishing online
for some time you maybe shocked by the results. You
can try a stripped-down version of the service for free.
If you want to use all the functionality, you have to
pay a nominal fee per search ($0.05).
Author: Miles Galliford
SubHub provides an all-in-one solution to enable you
to rapidly design, build and run your own content website.
Publish for profit on the web. Website: http://www.subhub.com
SubHub Articles Feed:
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Keywords : plagiarism, content theft, article theft,
content, content publishing, online publishing
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