Of course, when writing about the same subject there are bound to be instances where content is similar but Copyscape allows you to easily identify where it has literally been copied and pasted.
3. CONTACT THE WEBMASTER
If you are feeling kind, you can contact the webmaster, point out that they have plagiarised your content and ask them to remove it.
We use this approach if it is clear the site has used our content as a basis for its page but has not made enough changes for it to be sufficiently different to ours.
We usually give the webmaster five working days to amend the content or remove the page before we escalate the matter to Google and work with it to have the content removed.
4. CONTACT GOOGLE AS THEY TAKE COPY THEFT VERY SERIOUSLY
Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), Google will investigate and de-index a page that it believes contains plagiarised content.
To report content theft to Google, you need to provide evidence through its Search Console tool. Google then carries out a manual investigation.
If it agrees that copy has been stolen, it will remove that page from its search results and issue the webmaster a notice to inform them of their copyright breach.
We have done this on several occasions now and have found the process to be incredibly efficient and effective. Google really does take it seriously.
STEALING CONTENT COULD BE END GAME FOR AFFILIATES AND OPERATORS
While affiliates and operators may not take content theft and plagiarism all that seriously, the consequences of them being found guilty of breaching copyright could be devastating.
In an industry where ranking highly in Google is the difference between success and failure, having a page de-indexed and a black mark placed against your site could be terminal. It’s worth remembering that a lot of affiliates have content-heavy homepages, so if a homepage was considered to have breached the DMCA then that would be the page that is de-indexed.
It really is a shame that affiliates and, to a lesser extent, operators are stealing content. At the end of the day, this is theft and it should be treated as such.
The good news is that affiliates can take steps to protect themselves and ultimately have pages removed from Google where clear copyright breaches have taken place.
While imitation is often considered the sincerest form of flattery, in this case it isn’t. Unfortunately, motioning for content theft is now just another aspect of running an affiliate
business.
JAMES ASHTON is the head of content at FindMyUKCasino.com, an online casino comparison site that helps UK players find the best online casinos based on their individual preferences.