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The Internet Your Rights Online

Stop! Website Thief! 475

Rick Zeman writes "We've all heard of people grabbing an image from this web site, ideas from that web site, or some content from yet another web site. But what do you do when someone takes your entire web site and hosts it in a foreign country? Silicon.com has an article that tells the tale of two such web sites."
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Stop! Website Thief!

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  • /. the bastards! (Score:4, Informative)

    by zedmelon ( 583487 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:00PM (#8535157) Homepage Journal
    This sucks. I don't know if anything can be done legally, but we can slashdot the hell out of the offending site, right?

    http://www.carorcar.com [carorcar.com]
    solo [carorcar.com]
    another page [carorcar.com]
    and another page [carorcar.com]

    Or maybe just a thousand of us firing off wget -r in their direction. Redirect it to /dev/null...

    Will this get me a "-1 Instigator" mod? ;)

  • Easy (Score:5, Funny)

    by netfool ( 623800 ) * on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:00PM (#8535158) Homepage
    Easy:

    1) Submit story to silicon.com
    2) Submit story to slashdot.org
    3) Imagine what Car or Car's [carorcar.com] server looks like as it catches fire do to the /.ing.

    4) ....then, get back to work.

  • by jkauzlar ( 596349 ) * on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:00PM (#8535161) Homepage
    I remember when I had my own website, and a young Cowboyneal asked to 'mirror' it for me...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I KISS YOU !!!!!
    • by drayzel ( 626716 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:11PM (#8535358)
      Umm... That post actually isn't off topic.
      Anyone still remember Mahirs 15 minutes of fame because of his crazy website? If I remember correctly someone pretty much stole all his content and hosted it for laughs...SO not offtopic, just not very well explained.

      The original can be found here
      http://www.ikissyou.org/famous_site/famous_s ite.ht ml

      ~Z
  • Flattered or angry? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:01PM (#8535174)
    I wrote a biography of a famous historic figure, and I placed it in my web site, devoted to this figure. I put a copyright on the site. Since then, I've seen it all over the place, including online encyclopedias. Don't know whether to be flattered or angry.
    • by pdbogen ( 596723 ) <(tricia-slashdot) (at) (cernu.us)> on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:21PM (#8535536)
      Dude... You made a biography of CowboyNeal?
    • by gpinzone ( 531794 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:30PM (#8535663) Homepage Journal
      With the news that Full Throttle 2 is being cancelled, I remembered that I was the one who wrote the first Full Throttle's walkthrough:

      http://www.the-spoiler.com/ADVENTURE/Lucas.Arts/fu ll.throttle.4.html [the-spoiler.com]

      Doing a google search [google.com] yielded some interesting results. A few people have tried to take credit, but the body of the text still has my name and old email! If you're going to plagiarize, at least do it correctly.
    • Happens on Slashdot (Score:3, Interesting)

      by singularity ( 2031 ) *
      Copyrighted work on Slashdot (comments) even get copied.

      All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the Poster. The Rest (C) 1997-2004 OSDN.

      Compare my comment [slashdot.org] with this comment. [slashdot.org]

      Notice that I include a copyright mark on each of my comments, in addition to Slashdot's notice.

      I have nothing to really gain/lose by a Slashdot comment, but it definitely bothers me that people will take obviously copyrighted work and claim it as their own.

      You are
    • by solprovider ( 628033 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @08:30PM (#8538119) Homepage
      In 1995-6, I did support for Compaq at a Unisys facility. I wrote many solutions for our call center, including several guides for troubleshooting various issues. I distributed them on floppies to many of the phone support people, since we were not allowed to have our own resources. Many of them ended up on Compaq's website, attributed to someone else. Some of them ended up on Microsoft's website, attributed to another someone else.
      [A manager received permission to put my help system on the network just before I transferred. I still have copies.]

      Later, I described how you could not detach attachments in Lotus Notes if Windows95B had been patched with the "a" patch intended for the original Windows95. (The policy to immediately patch Windows95 after installation survived long after the standard install was Windows95B.) I added it to the internal Unisys online help system. A few months later, I found it on Microsoft's site with 3 words changed and attributed to someone else.

      In every case, the words changed were prepositions. I thought my original choices were better than the new version (probably because they were MY choices), but the content was otherwise identical. I guess they liked my style, but I would have enjoyed searching for my name and having many results pointing to microsoft.com.
      • I was working at another third-party support center that supported Netscape, back in 1995-6. At one point we had a rash of calls about whether Netscape could be used with AOL. Since I knew something about AOL, I quickly wrote out a HOWTO about this issue & sent it out as email, which ended with a lame joke that the compatibility of the UNIX versions of Netscape with AOL was not known.

        A few months later, after I had left said employer & I had to look up some information on the Netscape support websi
  • You do nothing. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Kenja ( 541830 )
    Unless the foreign country shares IP laws with where you are there is nothing you can do.
    • Re:You do nothing. (Score:2, Informative)

      by YodaNz ( 577316 )
      Quite often contacting their hosting provider and simply pointing out to them that they are hosting content violating your IP will be enough. Most hosts have T&Cs that cover this. This is, of course, after simply asking the person to stop using your IP. They may just not realise, or they may just be a 12 year old kid.
      • Re:You do nothing. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by milkman_matt ( 593465 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:47PM (#8536656)
        Quite often contacting their hosting provider and simply pointing out to them that they are hosting content violating your IP will be enough.

        That's what we told the people who stole our content [yourhost.com], unfortunately they are a russian hosting company [yourhost.ru] who stole all of our content, edited the company logo images (poorly) and didn't even change the layout! the phone numbers are in the same place, they even used the same "drowning dude help icon" thing.. In any case, as you can probably imagine, they were happy to hear from us until we told them it was OUR site they stole, then all of a sudden they lost their ability to speak english.. Ugh!

        Also, we've been designing a new site for some time now, and it kills me to think of the time we've put into this, to know that it will probably end up on the .ru site also as soon as it's live, with minimum work on their part.

        -matt
    • Wrong! (Score:3, Informative)

      They violated the law in the USA when they took the material from the USA. You can file a lawsuit against them, and potentially serve by e-mail.


      The problem would be collecting on the judgment. Since the site has advertising, you might want to contact the advertisers.


      Talk with a good IP/Internet lawsuit. If they don't know Rio v. Rio, then try another.

    • Re:You do nothing. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Greedo ( 304385 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:32PM (#8536477) Homepage Journal
      You may be in luck if the company uses a domain with a TLD mandated by ICANN (COM, NET, ORG, BIZ, INFO, etc.).

      With the new WDRP [icann.org] (Whois Data Reminder Policy) from ICANN, domain registrars are obligated to make sure their customers provide valid whois data for their domains. If they don't the domain can be pulled.

      As for carorcar.com, the whois data shows an owner in China, but with a US country code and zipcode (I think), and a phone number (+01.3212353319) in Brevard County, Florida. Heck, I can even see it's listed with a R. Young [reversepho...ectory.com] in Orlando.

      If you can convince their registrar that this is bogus, he might get the domain shut down.
  • Fight back! (Score:5, Funny)

    by CraigoFL ( 201165 ) <slashdot&kanook,net> on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:01PM (#8535186)
    But what do you do when someone takes your entire web site and hosts it in a foreign country?

    Post the URL here, and then Slashdot the buggers into oblivion! Make their bandwidth bill so high that they'll beg you to take it back!

  • ICANN (Score:2, Interesting)

    by IAmTheDave ( 746256 ) *
    Would copyright law give you legal action to have the domain name turned off, since the content it points to is infringing so horribly obviously?
  • Simple!! (Score:2, Redundant)

    by ewhenn ( 647989 )
    But what do you do when someone takes your entire web site and hosts it in a foreign country?

    You post it on slashdot so we can overwhelm it with traffic and take it down immediately.

  • Hypocrites (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...
    • Re:Hypocrites (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nycsubway ( 79012 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:12PM (#8535380) Homepage
      Theres a big difference between using IP from a source for your own benefit, but its another thing to use that IP to make money for yourself. Neither of which are particularly good.

      If you listen music you downloaded from the internet for free, its not the same as copying a CD and selling it with a copied cover.

      I'm not saying that copying music for your own use is a good thing to do, but its not nearly as bad as selling something that you've copied as your own.

    • Re:Hypocrites (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:13PM (#8535396)

      Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft"

      I do.

      but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...

      I don't.

      You seem to be under the impression that everybody who reads Slashdot thinks the same way, and that you are the lone voice of reason. That simply isn't true.

      The reason this isn't hypocrisy is that the same people aren't alternating between the two viewpoints. Different people are responsible for the different viewpoints.

    • Re:Hypocrites (Score:4, Insightful)

      by shark72 ( 702619 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:23PM (#8535560)

      "Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it..."

      Agreed. Typical arguments (which I've seen in just the past few days when discussing MP3/movie piracy here on /.) for abolishing copyrights in the digital domain include:

      • "Information wants to be free. Copying digital data doesn't take away anything from the original."
      • "If an artist doesn't want something to be copied, they shouldn't release it." (yeah, I know, this is "blame the victim" mentality, but many slashdotters happily use this as an argument for piracy or against DRM.)
      • "Digital content should be done for the joy of creating. If you're trying to get money for you work, you're a businessperson, not an artist, and therefore you suck. Piracy, and/or abolishing digital copyrights, will weed out the artists whose sole motivation is profit, and leave the world with the benefit of people who create for creation's sake."

      The important thing is that all of these arguments can be applied to the case of this Taiwanese site. As with MP3 piracy, some might argue that pirating a MP3 is really theft because it reduces the potential market for the material, and the same applies here -- this (if you will) pirated web site might collect ad revenue that the original site might have otherwise gotten. Many slashdotters would gladly tell the greedy artist "tough cookies" -- why no shame on the greedy web site creator who is clearly a luddite if they didn't see this coming?

      The bottom line is that in both cases, somebody else is benefitting off the work of an artist without compensating the original artist, and without the artist's permission.

      It's my hope that the "abolish online copyrights" crowd will chime in on this case and explain better than I can why pirating MP3s and movies is okay, and this is not.

      • Bad Comparison (Score:5, Insightful)

        by virg_mattes ( 230616 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:46PM (#8535902)
        > The important thing is that all of these arguments can be applied to the case of this Taiwanese site.

        Not correct. None of the arguments apply to plagiarism, which is the claiming of someone else's ideas as your own. Duplicating an MP3 and claiming that you made it yourself would be a good comparison to this case. The problem is not that the Taiwanese site simply copied the data, but they are misrepresenting it on an ongoing basis as their own work. That dances dangerously close to identity theft, especially if the Taiwanese site is using the fraud to capture ad revenue or using your reputation to garner faith (like convincing someone to give them a credit card number because they think it's you). In the case of a stolen Metallica MP3, it's rather unlikely that someone stealing the MP3 will try to present themselves as Metallica.

        Virg
      • Re:Hypocrites (Score:4, Redundant)

        by happyfrogcow ( 708359 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:01PM (#8536099)
        "Information wants to be free. Copying digital data doesn't take away anything from the original."

        But the information was already freely available on the original site. The forged, plagerised site stole the presentation of the information to make themselves some advertising revenue.

        If an artist doesn't want something to be copied, they shouldn't release it."

        I can honestly say I've never heard this argument used.

        Digital content should be done for the joy of creating

        The original site creator did do that. he made it for his enthusiasm in all things car related. He then found out he could pay for the site with ad revenue, and maybe make some money for his hard work. The plagerists stole the presentation of this persons information solely to make money. they had no interest in using the information in an intellectual way.

        It's my hope that the "abolish online copyrights" crowd will chime in on this case and explain better than I can why pirating MP3s and movies is okay, and this is not.

        I'm not against "online copyrights" as you say. I am against the extension of copyrights for the purpose of greed, ie, Disney's fight to not let Mickey Mouse get released into the public domain. Abolishing copyrights is rediculous. Sensible copyright law is not. We don't really have sensible copyright law these days.

        I'm not in favor of pirating mp3's or movies, yet I do see a great difference between this and that.
      • Re:Hypocrites (Score:3, Insightful)

        It's my hope that the "abolish online copyrights" crowd will chime in on this case and explain better than I can why pirating MP3s and movies is okay, and this is not.

        It's simple really. Most slashdotters can't make music or movies, therefore those things should be free. Many slashdotters can make web pages, therefore they deserve credit for them.

        It seems to be all to common and very trendy these days, especially here. Some people have no respect for the work of others, only their own.

        I expect someon
    • Re:Hypocrites (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ChaosDiscord ( 4913 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:07PM (#8536163) Homepage Journal
      Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...

      Typical Anonymous Coward trolling. Slashdot is neither a hive mind nor a borg. Believe it or not, the thousands of readers of Slashdot have diffent opinions. That you don't understand this marks you as an idiot or a troll.

      But on a more specific level, why are these two things totally different? If someone took one of my web sites and copied it for personal use I would be fine with that (although I'd ask that they use a bit of tact in doing the site rip; no need to be rude and totally soak all of my bandwidth). I'd be grumpy if someone provided a free public mirror of my site without my permission (that is, sharing my work), I would try to get the site taken down, but I'm going to be mellow about it. However, if someone were to take my web site, represent it as their own work, then try to profit from it, I would very, very angry. Similarly with music, movies, or software. Copies for personal use are fine; non-commercial sharing with original authorship preserved is wrong but we can work it out, commercial copies with authorship removed is evil.

    • by drooling-dog ( 189103 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:18PM (#8536282)
      Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...

      Damn, the secret's out. Slashdot is really just one person, clacking madly away at the keyboard and pretending to be a vast community. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome will be the end of Slashdot, mark my words.

    • Re:Hypocrites (Score:3, Informative)

      Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...

      I've noticed this sort of thinking before, in fact, I used to agree -- Then I took into account that, think about it, slashdot has enough users to take out entire websites at the blink of an eye when a story is posted, and you STILL see a ton of posts by people who did not RTFA, so l
    • Typical /. hypocrisy. When you misappropriate IP in the form of music, movies, and software, you say it's not "theft" -- but when someone does the same to your website, you call them thieves, and get all up at arms about it...

      You just need to understand that this is one of those irregular verbs; I exercise fair usage, you plagiarize, he has just been arrested under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
  • domain (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I had a successful website running for several years. Then someone registered a domain name that was two letters different than ours (think something along the lines of the difference between carsandtrucks.com and carandtruck.com). Then they set up a site that does exactly what we do, for exactly the same audience.

    Nothing i could do, because registering a trademark, finding a lawyer, suing these people.. all too much time, effor and money for a non-profit hobby site.
  • We're probably giving the rip-off site a lot of traffic, thus advertising revenues. :( On the other hand, perhaps we'll give a little offensive /. effect! :)
  • Run some version of Linux that will upset SCO, spoof the IP of the offending server, then host a boatload of mp3's and video files that will get the RIAA on their butts.

    Good ol' fashion American lawsuits, without any cost to you! ...or something like that.
  • by utahjazz ( 177190 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:04PM (#8535231)
    Could someone post a mirror please?
  • As long as they are not altering the content and then spoofing you domain.. (i.e in america typing www.website.com has the legit website where is country x typing www.website.com being a porn site)
    However, even if they are not being a true mirror, then what really can you do? not much. One could attempt to send them a please stop, and maybe even some scary lawyer letter, but if they are not in your same country what will it matter to them. Yes there are International laws, but how well has America for insta
  • Isn't that called a "mirror?"
  • Things you can do (Score:5, Informative)

    by prostoalex ( 308614 ) * on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:05PM (#8535264) Homepage Journal
    There are very few people in this world who would maliciously copy the Web site for the purpose of mirroring it out of their own pocket. More often than not, it's the pageviews and ad rotation that they're after.

    Proliferation of Google Ads, and similar offerings from FindWhat and MarketBanker allowed a bunch of content-driven Web sites to exist and make money at the same time. At one of the sites I run [techinterviews.com] the click-through ratio on Google Ads (the site's only means of survival) are at about 0.1-0.2% and thus more traffic and more content means more targetted visitors, more pageviews, and with 0.1-0.2% ratio being (you hope) constant, more money.

    So hit them where it hurts. If they earn money through Google, Findwhat or MarketBanker, contact the ad engines. Most of the time it's abuse of the service agreement and abuse of their advertising system. They send the paychecks, and if they tell the guy to shape up or have the account suspended, actions will be taken.

    Contact their ISP or hoster, regardless of the country. Unless both the hoster and site copier are the same people, you can find reasonable understanding there, with hoster giving then the warning to the copier about possible implications.

    Contact his advertisers. If you see lots of Amazon referral links, contact Amazon Associates support with the problem description. I never heard Amazon actually doing something about it, but the pressure from several points on the copier might enhance your chances of him giving up.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    avast pirated sites me shipmates [pirated-sites.com]

  • Found one today (Score:5, Informative)

    by Remlik ( 654872 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:07PM (#8535295) Homepage
    Check this out. Go to Yardcare.com [yardcare.com]. If you read the text under how to restore your lawn you'll notice refrences to pictures and charts but you don't see any.

    Now go to This Popular Mechanics Article [popularmechanics.com] and notice the text is verbatim, only this time with the proper pictures and charts.

    Which one is the origional site? Hmm...not to hard too figure out. I wasn't sure if I should have emailed PM or not, either way I think its rather rude and unbecoming of the web.
    • Re:Found one today (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dasmegabyte ( 267018 ) <das@OHNOWHATSTHISdasmegabyte.org> on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:42PM (#8535841) Homepage Journal
      You know, this isn't necessarily theft. Almost all newspapers and magazines resell their content for newsletters, "special sections," and the web, in exactly the same way that as clip art CDs. Many of them will allow you remove their byline if you're willing to pay them enough (and don't claim that you wrote it). No reason for PM not to do this...an article like "Improve your lawn" is considered filler. They'll probably never republish it, so it'll just sit in a library unless you offer them a few thou to buy the rights to the text.

      When I worked in the online newspaper biz, I wrote a piece of software to help rip content from obscure formats on these CDs into XML. We had a stack of hundreds of them, bought cutrate from other content providers who went out of business buying these sorts of articles and trying to resell them. We would then load this content into "online special sections" and give them to our customers to sell local ads and add their own content. The ones who took the initiative and understood the internet saw really good returns and great interest despite the fact that it was all recycled content.

      Remember: to most newspapers and magazines, articles are just there to take up space in between ads. Seriously. Ads are laid out first, and then content wraps around them. If content is too big, it gets pared down to fit around the ads. If content is too small, they buy something from AP/Reuters/UPI or take it from one of these CDs of stories...
  • by amigoro ( 761348 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:08PM (#8535309) Homepage Journal
    I really hate these kinds of people. I know how much time and effort it takes me to maintain my sites. And the last thing I want is some idiot coming and stealing my ideas.

    There isn't a lot you can do to protect yourself when people operate from these safe havens. That's what's most frustrating. The spammers have been doing this for years and have got away with it. And now content stealers.

    Will the bandits be able to steal a site like the newspaper here? [mithuro.com]. This site has only one page, and every other page is rendered dynamically. Maybe this is the solution.

  • www. (Score:4, Funny)

    by _ph1ux_ ( 216706 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:09PM (#8535336)
    www.srashdot.org
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:10PM (#8535341)
    These people rip these sites, pass them off as their own - even put them on their CV, and get the jobs the true talent deserve. They need stringing up.

    For instance :-
    www.nevermindus.com [nevermindus.com] vs
    www.digitalabstracts.com [digitalabstracts.com]

    There is a great selection of these on Pirated Sites [pirated-sites.com]
  • by corporatemutantninja ( 533295 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:12PM (#8535377)
    My site Physics 2000 [colorado.edu] started showing up in foreign countries, fully translated. It's a non-profit site, and of course we love the idea of having it available in other countries, but kind of unsettling to have it ripped off without a word.
  • by dfay ( 75405 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:14PM (#8535426)

    Someone did this to /.! [slashdot.jp]

    I hope Rob and Co. sue their pants off! Sheesh, what audacity!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:22PM (#8535548)
    I used to love seeing people do this with images on Ebay. One guy was selling some computer equipment and linked to a picture on another guy's site. When the site owner found out, he replaced the picture with one showing the equip all smashed and ruined. It was funny as hell.
    • Very Funny. Same type of story, a friend of mine runs a business here and one of their administrative assistants sends out a monthly mailing to the clients. Well... she had linked in her monthly email a picture of coffee & donuts (Linked from another site). Needless to say, one month, the site owner replaced the coffee & donuts image with (you guessed it) gay porn! Well... their entire customer base had a fun surprise waiting in their inboxes the next morning, and the site owner refused to chang
  • by Nspace13 ( 654963 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:24PM (#8535575) Homepage
    I work for www.cloudspace.com and every once in a while we notice something odd in our server logs and find that some has ripped off our navigation and left some of our graphics in it, or used our stylesheet. We've messed a few people's site look up a little by changing our stylesheet and had fun with it. Recently we found this site from a french company: http://www.studio-lol.com/ It comes up as the 8th result in a google search of our company name "cloudspace". They left the word "cloudspace" as the alt tag to their logo when they ripped off our navigation. We don't really mind too much when people copy our designs around here. Too bad they choose our own website with a lot of outdated code. It is coded in tables, but with being so busy lately we havent had time to update it much in the last couple years. We do everything we can in divs with css now. We just kind take it as a compliment when someone copies our designs.
  • More Rip-Offs (Score:3, Informative)

    by mags330 ( 746182 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:28PM (#8535632)
    It's amazing how many bottom feeders there are out there: http://www.pirated-sites.com/
  • As seen on CSPAN (Score:4, Informative)

    by xleeko ( 551231 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:43PM (#8535845)

    This really burns me.

    As a geek who is into manufacturing, I was listening to some of the international trade speechifying on CSPAN the other day, and heard the following particularly relevant tale from Rep DeFazio of Oregon. (Quote courtesy of a quick search of the congressional record)

    I have a small company in my district called Videx. They developed a new kind of scanning technology. They developed an electronic lock. They are selling in 44 countries, including, their mistake, China, where they were selling about a $1 million a year. But it turns out, they say in China if you bring in intellectual property within 24 hours it is counterfeited and for sale.

    And the Videx company had followed all the laws and protections, went to the trouble of getting supposed Chinese protection and patents and all that. One day they found their entire company had been cloned in China including their Web site. In fact, the Chinese, the fake Chinese Videx, had gone them one up. They had a little fake American flag waving at the top of their Web site, this Chinese company.

    They even copied and translated into Chinese the U.S. copyright and patents on their software. They did not make a very good product, the company found out, because they started getting product support calls from people who thought they were clients of the U.S. Videx, but were actually clients of the phony Chinese Videx. This happens time and time again.

    For the full transcript, go here [gpo.gov]

    - Dave

  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @04:51PM (#8535971) Homepage
    From the article (my emphasis added):
    Understandably O'Donoghue was upset and tried to get in touch with the site's owners. "We emailed them via the contact page, which was the same as our own, and heard nothing back," he said.

    Hmmmmm.... They emailed themselves to complain about the copy, eh? And heard nothing back? Well now, that makes sense.

    From: webmaster@carenthusiast.com
    To: webmaster@carenthusiast.com
    Subject: You stole my site!

    Give it back!
    -------
    From: webmaster@carenthusiast.com
    To: webmaster@carenthusiast.com
    Subject: Re: You stole my site!

    > Give it back!

    You dummy, I'm you. Email them!
  • by sdo1 ( 213835 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:02PM (#8536111) Journal
    1) Set up slick website.
    2) Set up a mirror of it in Taiwan.
    3) Submit story to silicon.com and slashdot about how your website was "ripped off".
    4) Watch the enormous number of hits rise as "outraged" /.'ers check your site out for the first time (many of which may like what you have and come back again in the future).
    5) ????
    6) Profit!!

    -S
  • E2 content lift (Score:3, Interesting)

    by call ( 185833 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:04PM (#8536135) Homepage

    Over on Everything2 [everything2.com], we recently had someone lift a lot of content and use it to populate a portal site [homepages.org] intended to collect revenue by ads and amazon click-throughs.

    When the E2 user population realised what had happened, there began a general forming of lynch mods and baying for blood, and the perpetrator ('Marty')'s personal site was flooded with incredibly nasty messages.

    Marty claimed he'd assumed that the content was intended to be more or less freeware, and lifted it wholesale (without any attributions to original authors, of course). When he realised his mistake (at it was a very stupid mistake to make, but at least it seems to have been an honest mistake), Marty withdrew the content and started trying to apologise.

    Many of the E2 noders wouldn't hear the apologies, however, and in the end neither camp could claim any sort of moral high ground over their behaviour. Important lessons learned:

    1. Check copyright before you lift things
    2. Make sure your copyright notices are visible
    3. Being civil about a problem might not get the same results as being a dick about it; but the downside is, you're a dick.

    Yeah, I learned that last one myself...

  • by shish ( 588640 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:09PM (#8536196) Homepage
    There's been a whole site for this, for at least a few years...

    pirated-sites [pirated-sites.com]

  • by rakerman ( 409507 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:20PM (#8536310) Homepage Journal

    Most people are quite good about it and take the copy of the page down or respect my mirroring conditions. Others however, ignore all my requests.

    For example, here my most popular page [akerman.ca], which I use Google AdSense to pay for (cover bandwidth costs etc.)

    Here is a ripoff of my page [mplsgeeks.com], with the email address changed, I'm not sure why. Maybe to claim a set of skills? I wish he would take the copy of my page down.

    • What you do is call the police and file a complaint and then start legal proceedings. They clearly are going to lose.

      The issue is what your damages are. At best you _might_ be able to recover the investment in the time that would be required to compile all of this information.

      Your position is no different than say Walt Disney who has tee shirt designs, characters and so forth taken illegally. The difference is that in the case of copyright infringment there are now some laws that place some pretty stee
  • by Shimmer ( 3036 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:23PM (#8536353) Journal
    I don't mean to make fun of the victim here, but this quote is pretty funny:

    "We emailed them via the contact page, which was the same as our own, and heard nothing back,"

    -- Brian
  • Outrageous! (Score:3, Funny)

    by bluegreenone ( 526698 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:25PM (#8536388) Homepage
    This is outrageous. The nerve of these people blatantly hosting this out on the open web instead of using an accepted piracy medium like Kazaa.
    Outrageous!
  • Even worse! (Score:3, Funny)

    by hacker ( 14635 ) <hacker@gnu-designs.com> on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:34PM (#8536496)
    I started going through my weblogs for all the domains I host, looking for 404's, and correcting them. Many of the domains we host have updated their pages, moved files around, etc. and other sites and servers and users still point to the old files and content. Those were easy to fix with a bit of mod_rewrite and mod_redir hackery, and it keeps the users happy and logs nice and clean.

    But as I was parsing out the logs, I noticed quite a few other curious things, which led me to poke through the referer logs and start tracing some interesting hits.

    ..which led me to these two sites:

    http://www.actionweb.com/hosting/clients/ [actionweb.com]

    http://www.firstwebserver.com/hosting/clients/inde x.html [firstwebserver.com]

    Both of these domains are registered in completely different states, by two completely different people, and yet... other than page color, they are identical, even down to the "testimonials" page. Whomever ripped this off from whom, can't possibly be that stupid... or can they?

  • Happened to me (Score:4, Interesting)

    by John Harrison ( 223649 ) <johnharrison@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Thursday March 11, 2004 @05:44PM (#8536619) Homepage Journal
    I was checking out where my video game, "Ultimate Blaster" was ranked on Google. To my surprise I found that it was ranked quite highly, but when I click on the link it wasn't my URL, but it was my site.

    The entire site had been copied and then some text added claiming that someone else was the author. I did some more Googling and found that the theif was a 15 year old in England and got his email address and the name of his school.

    I emailed him and offered to tell the school's head master what was going on. The site was down in hours and he replied saying how sorry he was.

    I explained that I didn't mind him offering a download of the game, but that I did mind him claiming credit for it.

  • by hondo77 ( 324058 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @06:11PM (#8536938) Homepage
    ...but on a much smaller scale. Someone had copied a popular page from my site. Tweaked the code a little but left the ad code the same. I just changed the ad for that page to be an image that read "This site will be closing soon. Click here to go to our new location." I crack myself up.
  • by codejester ( 589238 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @06:29PM (#8537159)

    If carorcar is doing this to make money via adverts and the wronged site owners can not get satisfaction from carorcar, why not put pressure on the people paying or supporting carorcar (e.g. websponsors [websponsors.com])?
  • My own experience... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by payndz ( 589033 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @06:48PM (#8537327)
    I had somebody rip off my Futurama fansite and pass it off as their own - in the Czech Republic, of all places. Not much I could do about that beyond send them an irate email and ask them to pack it in.

    More insidiously, I've had fanart (from the same site) of mine be copied and printed up on t-shirts sold on eBay - passing them off as official Futurama merchandise. Again, what can you do? Complaining to eBay is all very well, but the people doing it will just open new accounts under different names even if eBay closes them down...

  • by Shiifty ( 704247 ) on Thursday March 11, 2004 @09:12PM (#8538420) Homepage
    If the site is dynamic, is it possible to copy the site, including all directories and scripts without actually running the scripts? Or rip raw code like php?

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