Article Plagiarism: the Next Internet Ripoff?
Content is King! shout the search engines. That's what the
search engines love. We also love the non-reciprocal links that
we get for our websites when our articles are published on other
peoples' sites with our resource boxes dutifully appended below
them.
To create a well written article takes time and effort. We have
to get everything right: it has to be of relevance to the reader
in that subject field; it has to be well researched; all
spelling, punctuation and grammar must be correction; it has to
be a genuine contribution to that particular area of
specialization, and so interesting that the editor will jump at
the chance of publishing it. And, oh yes, all the right keywords
have to be there, of the right density and in the correct
proportions.
The well-crafted article must satisfy both the reader and the
bot; both the aesthetics of the eye and the strictures of the
code. So those of us who try and be at least a little bit
serious about things know that a second draft is always
necessary, and then a third. Then it's best to sleep on it. Even
after that, we know that we have to forget about it for a few
days until we are able to come back to it again with a freshly
critical mind. You prune it and nurture it. You take off the
sharp edges and you tighten it up. If necessary you know when
you have to tear it up and start over again.
Only after we have got it absolutely right - and then after
spending many hours submitting to directories, editors of
ezines, article announcement sites and individual webmasters -
are we rewarded, perhaps, with those hard-won non-reciprocal
inbound live hyperlinks.
But wait. There seems to be a problem. It appears that an
increasing number of people are quite happy to simply copy and
paste our work onto their own sites without a link back. Or they
don't bother to check if the link is 'live'.
That would be bad enough. But there are other people who print
our articles and then don't even bother to name the person who
wrote it.
But there's far worse: those people who print our article and
then announce to the world that they wrote it themselves! Some
of those even have the temerity to add the copyright sign next
to their name!
I may be being a bit too harsh. Perhaps these people don't
realize that they're doing anything wrong. After all, the
Internet was originally conceived as ownerless and based upon
free and open source information. And I can think of nothing
more Public Domain, in fact or in spirit, than the World Wide
Web.
Yet just consider what it is these people are doing. They are
stealing other peoples' work and passing it off as their own.
They are effectively also stealing the web traffic that goes
with it, the traffic that our labours should be rewarding our
websites with, and diverting it to their own. This is blatant
plagiarism. It just should not happen. Theft is theft, in
whatever medium.
I wrote an article a few months ago on Internet marketing for
small businesses. A search for the title of that article on
Google now returns 10,800 pages, so at least the title itself
has been reproduced that number of times and in that number of
different places. A search for a chunk of text from the middle
of the article returns 536 pages, which suggests that the
article text has been published in its entirety no fewer than
536 times. Great! So now I have 536 inbound links from that one
article! Wrong.
I looked at individual entries of the article and in a
surprising number of cases there were no backlinks at all. Also
surprising - and somewhat sickening - was the number of
individuals who wantonly attached their own names to my work.
I recently posted the same article to a fresh source of
publishers. I was astonished at the response of one editor of a
well-known directory who had rejected the article on the grounds
that it was not mine! She had seen the same piece on many other
websites under different names, she said, and it was not her
policy to publish work that had been produced using "cookie
cutter" techniques. I wrote back saying that it really was my
own work, citing the URL of SitePro News where it originally
aired as that day's headline feature. She apologized and was
even good enough to supply me with a list of names of people and
sites who had published it as their own. I'm so tempted to
publish their names here (perhaps I will on my blog; so watch
out!) but have decided that discretion should rule. For the
moment, at least.
But I think there is a clear message here. The fashion for
article writing and publishing for content and backlinks is
going through the roof at the moment. It's like a mini Internet
boom all of its own. And like any other boom it has attracted
its own inevitable pack of rat-racers, chancers, charlatans and
cheats; shysters who go for the shortcuts every time, while
remaining quite happy for other people to do their work for them.
For the record, the convention is this: distribute and publish
the article freely by all means. But it must be published in its
entirety and unedited, and MUST include the resource box with a
live hyperlink back to the author's site (or wherever the author
wants, for that matter).
Hey, now even my lawyer understands!
Next time I will publish their names gleefully, and be damned.