Stolen Articles
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Stolen Articles
Hey everyone!
A client of mine just let me know that an article he purchased had long ago been scraped and posted here:
edit -- the article was taken down
I've contacted CC and the site, and I'm just wondering if anyone has any other suggestions. I know that Google has a copyright removal page. Has anyone every successfully used it before?
Thanks for any help!
A client of mine just let me know that an article he purchased had long ago been scraped and posted here:
edit -- the article was taken down
I've contacted CC and the site, and I'm just wondering if anyone has any other suggestions. I know that Google has a copyright removal page. Has anyone every successfully used it before?
Thanks for any help!
Last edited by evaku on Tue Mar 24, 2015 8:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Stolen Articles
So sorry that this has happened. It's such a common occurrence anymore. I've used the complaint form successfully many times. Good luck! WG~
Re: Stolen Articles
The DMCA process should work well. And, if enough people complain about the site stealing content, it will affect their rank. And oh how I love to see the content thieves QQ at webmaster central that their rank was affected by DMCAs.
Re: Stolen Articles
Have you tried Googling the titles of your non-sold CC content (in quotation marks)? Scrapers are 'borrowing' titles and even short summaries.
Re: Stolen Articles
The good news is that as long as your site is stronger, you'll outrank a scraper. Actually, if a scraper outranks your own content, it's a sign that your own site has quality issues.
Still freakin frustrating though.
Still freakin frustrating though.
Re: Stolen Articles
Won't having an article title plastered all over the Interwebz impact sales though? Thinking of adding alternate titles at the bottom of each article as an 'extra' for buyers (33% showing).Lysis wrote:The good news is that as long as your site is stronger, you'll outrank a scraper. Actually, if a scraper outranks your own content, it's a sign that your own site has quality issues.
Still freakin frustrating though.
Re: Stolen Articles
I'm not sure you can use Google's copyright removal for a sold article. You are no longer the copyright owner.evaku wrote:Hey everyone!
A client of mine just let me know that an article he purchased had long ago been scraped and posted here:
http://www.hayward-dispensary.com/need- ... a-edibles/
I've contacted CC and the site, and I'm just wondering if anyone has any other suggestions. I know that Google has a copyright removal page. Has anyone every successfully used it before?
Thanks for any help, and if you have written about the topic of marijuana, I suggest checking the site out yourself. I just noticed that they have also stolen an article from beconrad:
http://www.hayward-dispensary.com/fasci ... marijuana/
Which, according to CC, has zero sales.
https://www.constant-content.com/find-f ... earch=true
This webpage has a phone number and address. I'd call followed by a sternly worded postal letter including the penalties for copyright violation.
Re: Stolen Articles
I suppose if the customer checks, then it will affect sales here. But, ultimately, if the customer has a killer site that's very popular, even if a scraper stole the title, the customer site will likely outrank the scraper.HiredGun wrote: Won't having an article title plastered all over the Interwebz impact sales though? Thinking of adding alternate titles at the bottom of each article as an 'extra' for buyers (33% showing).
If the customer's site has quality issues or a manual penalty, then it's more likely the scraper will dominate.
The issue is that no one wants to admit that their site is low quality, so they always blame scrapers for their issues. But, duplicate content is not an issue for high quality sites.
Re: Stolen Articles
Wow thank you for all the comments and good info guys I did contact the site (with a very sternly worded e-mail ) and got a very brief e-mail today that makes it seem as if they will do something about it, so I am hopeful and will keep my eye on it for the next few days.
I do Google some of my non-sold articles from time to time (it's hard to do for all of them because I'm in the hundreds!) and it always comes back okay. This is the first time this has happened to me (to my knowledge anyway!)
Thanks again everyone!
I do Google some of my non-sold articles from time to time (it's hard to do for all of them because I'm in the hundreds!) and it always comes back okay. This is the first time this has happened to me (to my knowledge anyway!)
Thanks again everyone!
Re: Stolen Articles
So it actually turns out that the site in question had purchased my article from iWriter, which infuriates me even more!! They were nice enough to take it down "in good faith," and I'm very grateful that this wasn't more difficult than it had to be. It has been wonderful dealing with them, actually! Now I'm left wondering how often articles are stolen from here and sold on iWriter!
Re: Stolen Articles
Do you show 100% of your articles in the long summary?evaku wrote:So it actually turns out that the site in question had purchased my article from iWriter, which infuriates me even more!! They were nice enough to take it down "in good faith," and I'm very grateful that this wasn't more difficult than it had to be. It has been wonderful dealing with them, actually! Now I'm left wondering how often articles are stolen from here and sold on iWriter!
Re: Stolen Articles
lol iWriter. The home of the plagiarizing writers and scams.
iWriter is where all of the stolen content from Elance showed up. The iWriter would throw up a job with a stolen or fraudulent CC number and then tell writers they had 40 hour a day work for them. Then disappear and not pay. If the Elancer was smart enough to use Elance's tracker software, they'd get paid. But most of them didn't.
Anyone buying content from iWriter is in for a big, plagiarized surprise.
iWriter is where all of the stolen content from Elance showed up. The iWriter would throw up a job with a stolen or fraudulent CC number and then tell writers they had 40 hour a day work for them. Then disappear and not pay. If the Elancer was smart enough to use Elance's tracker software, they'd get paid. But most of them didn't.
Anyone buying content from iWriter is in for a big, plagiarized surprise.