Post by account_disabled on Dec 30, 2023 8:02:11 GMT
Last time we talked about a series of texts taken from various blogs , including this one, and republished on two sites, so today I decided to talk about how content for sites and blogs should be created. A guide that is certainly not technical, but which brings us closer to the creation of online content , a sort of civil code for the use and consumption of bloggers, companies and professionals. A story of plagiarism as a premise When I did a complete restyling of my old site danieleimperi.it, in which I proposed myself as a web designer, I spent several hours studying and writing ad hoc content to offer web design, restyling and blog creation services.
A series of thematic pages, in-depth on those topics, which also helped me reach some good positions on Google. And they also gave rise to a series of plagiarisms. I remember a Sardinian web designer who copied the text of the home page for me, putting in the feminine version what I had written in the masculine version. She took it with a smile when I wrote about it in a post, and she also came to comment. That same text was also taken by a young man, who stuck it in her CV... A web agency in Naples - which also offered copywriting services - copied the text of the FAQ for me. The funny thing is that at the end of the text I had written "For any other information contact me", with the last word linked to my contact page, and they didn't even notice that link, leaving it in perpetual memory. Of theft.
Web agencies and web professionals who steal other people's texts while ignoring - or perhaps not caring - that plagiarism comes out sooner or later is a very serious matter. This is serious because if you offer web-related services, you cannot ignore how web searches are performed. Do you think the thefts from that site have stopped? No, because I tried to look for some passages of those texts and I discovered that others have appropriated them: Marco Scipioni who creates websites in Terni The L'Aquila website agency that used the text on my home page Web Storm 88 which stole the texts of several pages from me Karos Consulting who put one of my texts in a brochure Bli.it who used my texts for their About us page at point 4 "Creation and restyling of the website" As proof of the theft, my old site is still available on Archive .
A series of thematic pages, in-depth on those topics, which also helped me reach some good positions on Google. And they also gave rise to a series of plagiarisms. I remember a Sardinian web designer who copied the text of the home page for me, putting in the feminine version what I had written in the masculine version. She took it with a smile when I wrote about it in a post, and she also came to comment. That same text was also taken by a young man, who stuck it in her CV... A web agency in Naples - which also offered copywriting services - copied the text of the FAQ for me. The funny thing is that at the end of the text I had written "For any other information contact me", with the last word linked to my contact page, and they didn't even notice that link, leaving it in perpetual memory. Of theft.
Web agencies and web professionals who steal other people's texts while ignoring - or perhaps not caring - that plagiarism comes out sooner or later is a very serious matter. This is serious because if you offer web-related services, you cannot ignore how web searches are performed. Do you think the thefts from that site have stopped? No, because I tried to look for some passages of those texts and I discovered that others have appropriated them: Marco Scipioni who creates websites in Terni The L'Aquila website agency that used the text on my home page Web Storm 88 which stole the texts of several pages from me Karos Consulting who put one of my texts in a brochure Bli.it who used my texts for their About us page at point 4 "Creation and restyling of the website" As proof of the theft, my old site is still available on Archive .