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If you regularly provide content online (and, by the way, you should be doing this for SEO and marketing purposes), you are being bombarded by infringement and may not even realize it.
Doubt me? I can tell you that, at least, once a week (and often more often) I find a website or blog which has cut and pasted one of my articles and used it as its own. Addressing infringement is like taking out the garbage. It is annoying and time-consuming, but must be done so your house doesn't stink.
How Do I Find Infringement?
With millions of web pages with all types of content, how can I find infringing pages? The answer is simple: Google.
You need to set up Google Alerts for key terms and phrases in your industry (or other topics which you write about). Google Alerts is free, easy, and quick. Setting this up will "push" links to articles which should be of interest to you anyway. More importantly, in the short blurbs emailed to you, I bet you will find infringement. Indeed, most often the title of the piece alone will be enough. Click on the link to be sure but your initial reaction will often be right.
How Do I Handle Infringement?
I found a good article on this topic called "5 Steps For Dealing With Stubborn Plagiarism Cases", and, by all means, please read it.
Candidly, due to bandwidth and ROI issues, I perform only one of these 5 steps –report it to Google. By virtue of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Google has to address it and they do a very good and prompt job doing so.
For me, submitting complaints is so commonplace that I created a "Google Infringement Form", which I make available for all my readers to plagiarize, er, I mean copy.
Complete and submit this form and Google will investigate and, then, remove it from their index. That is, it will not appear if anyone does a search of your article title or of a key phrase from it. If you don't think being removed from Google's index is a powerful weapon, read "Can Google Backlist You?”
Further, often the un-scrupulous plagiarists are using the content to try and generate Adsense monies (i.e., that is, getting paid by Google for each click to a Google ad which runs on their site). If so, your complaint will also remove that page from Google's content network thereby hitting them where it hurts, their pocketbook. Similarly, if the offending content is posted using a Blogger platform, Google will remove the offending blog post.
While it may not get you "juiced", the above work is important to protect your intellectual property and avoid dilution of your brand. Now go get 'em!
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Matthew Weiss is an admitted business learning junkie. He reads only business books and magazines (well almost only) and attends dozens of business workshops, keynotes and panel discussions each year. In this blog, he provides quality, take-home value from "all of the above" and shares his personal thoughts and experiences. Weiss is a New York traffic lawyer and sole owner of Weiss & Associates, PC, a boutique law firm specializing in vehicle and traffic matters throughout New York State. He is also the Global Learning Chair for the Entrepreneurs' Organization. He can be reached at mjweiss@888redlight.com.
He can be reached at mjweiss@888redlight.com.



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