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Do You Know What Your Website Visitors Are REALLY Looking For?
Through the last few years I've tried many solutions to a nagging problem... how to let visitors easily search through my website. Each time I'd try a new service, script or software program I'd run into a problem. Either the searching was too slow,...
How to succeed as a web host reseller
Web hosting services are in very high demand and therefore any re-seller who knows what they are doing can make a bundle quickly without too much trouble. However, just like in any other business, one needs to be cautious and to be very much aware...
The net-domain - backbone of the web
The net-domain - the backbone of the web
We do not always realize, that figures are just quantity and can deceive about quality.
In spite of the fact, that the net-domain is only the No. 4 in terms of the number of domain names...
Web Services Interoperability
Interoperability is one of the main promises of Web services. Web services are designed to be independent of the underlying operating system and programming language. In this article we will address some basic web services interoperability issues...
What is a Web Service?
Reprintable Article: Permission is granted for the following article to forward, reprint, distribute, use for ezine, newsletter, website, offer as free bonus or part of a product for sale as long as no changes are made and the byline, copyright, and...
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Business Website Content Theft: 3 Myths
Myth 1. Web Content Theft & Other Internet Copyright Violations Are Hard to Pursue.
At least for written content, search engines make internet copyright violations easier to find and pursue than violations in print.
It is very easy to take injunctive action against a copyright violator; it would be a waste of money in most cases to go to an attorney. Simply file a DMCA complaint with Google, Yahoo, MSN, other search engines, any advertising programs of which the site is a part, and/or the site's host. I just filed a complaint with Yahoo the other day. They responded within two days.
Myth 2. Search Engines Inflict a Duplicate Content Penalty on Content Theft Victims.
There is no duplicate content penalty in major search engines for work that is duplicated across different sites; only for content that is duplicated across the same site. If there were a duplicate content penalty for content shared across websites, distributing content to other sites would not be such a popular website
promotion tactic. Do a search on "Secrets of Writing a Business Website Homepage," on of my articles, and you'll see it on hundreds of websites--none of them delisted.
Myth 3. Web Content Theft Completely Destroys Your Site's Value to Web Surfers.
Web content theft erodes the links of trust that make up the web. But it won't completely destroy your site. The web is so vast that even having your content on hundreds of sites does not mean that people will find your site unoriginal and not worth visiting. Just look at how much of any newspaper is "duplicate content" in the form of AP feeds.
In short, web content theft is bad, but it's not the end of the web--that is, unless people let it be.
About the Author
Joel Walsh is a website content writer: http://UpMarketContent.com [Web publication requirement: use "website content writer" as the anchor text/visible link text for the URL: http://UpMarketContent.com]
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