Someone Stole My Site: How To Defend Yourself When Someone Plagiarizes Your Text
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© 2006 Karyn Greenstreet.
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Article Length: 734 Words
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Someone Stole My Site: How To Defend Yourself When Someone
Plagiarizes Your Website Text
I knew one day it would happen. Someone stole the text from my
website and used it on their own website. Dirty rotten
scoundrels!
According to the US Copyright Office website
(www.copyright.gov):
"Copyright protection subsists from the time the work is created
in fixed form. The copyright in the work of authorship
immediately becomes the property of the author who created the
work."
What Do You Do?
Here are some ways to discover which sites have stolen your text:
1. Find some text on your website that is so "you" that it's
unlikely that anyone else would write a phrase or sentence
that way. Go to www.google.com, and put that phrase
or sentence into their search, within quotation marks. For
example, one phrase that of my own that I searched on
looked like this: "you'll end up struggling to make your
business a success, and all your passion and enthusiasm
will drain away." (Go ahead, type it into Google and see
who's got my text on their site.) You have to put the
phrase within quotation marks so that Google knows to
search for the whole phrase with all the words right next
to each other.
2. Make note of the sites that have the same text as yours.
While it is completely possible in millions and millions of
websites that someone might have written the exact same
phrase, it's worth investigating every site that comes up.
3. Another great place to search for plagiarized sites is
www.copyscape.com
Here are some steps to getting a site to take down plagiarized
text:
1. Gather as much information about the offending site as you
can.
2. Print out all pages from their site where the plagiarized
text resides.
3. Try to find a contact name, phone number and email address
from the site.
4. Go to www.internic.net/whois.html and get all their
registration information. If they are not in the USA, go to
Google and type in "whois" plus the name of their country.
You should be able to find a whois site that can get their
DNS record for you.
5. Go to www.alexa.com and find whatever information
you can there.
6. Finally, write to the offending site owner and tell them
that you found plagiarized text on their site. List the
URLs of the offending pages along with the copyrighted URLs
of your own pages. Give them two or three days to either
delete the pages, or re-write them so that they no longer
include your text.
This is not the time to play nice guy! Tell the offending site
owner that you are copying their hosting company and domain
registrar on the letter or email, and do so.
Make sure when you write this email or letter, you don't use any
passive language, and do not say "please". Demand your rights. It
is illegal and unethical for them to do what they did and they
need to stop doing it immediately.
Another great resource is www.waybackmachine.org . This
allows you to check what their websites looked like throughout
the years. You may be able to pinpoint the date when those
people served themselves with a hefty spoon of your web content.
Someone pointed out to me that sometimes the offender is the
website designer, not the owner of the site. If you are an owner
of a site, and you did not write your own text, ask your designer
where he or she got the text. Make it clear to them that you
will not tolerate any plagiarized text and that you will hold
them legally responsible in any charge or lawsuit that comes up
over the copy on your website.
Some final notes:
Always put a copyright statement on your site. If it took you a
long time to write your text, you should be the only one
benefiting from it, not some unethical person who is looking for
a shortcut.
If the site doesn't comply with your request, you might have to
get your attorney involved. Only you can decide if the expense
of an attorney is worth it for you.
I have written to the six sites that stole my text. Two have
complied and taken down the offending pages within three days of
my request. If the others don't comply, I will be posting their
websites in my blog. I'm not afraid of a little publicity, but I
bet they are.
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© 2006 Karyn Greenstreet.
Karyn Greenstreet is a Self Employment expert and small
business coach. She shares techniques, skills and strategies
with self-employed people to boost motivation, create clear
goals and cohesive plans, and increase profits. Visit her
website at www.PassionForBusiness.com
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