Welcome back to my blog!

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shaownhasan
Posts: 491
Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 6:19 pm

Welcome back to my blog!

Post by shaownhasan »

As soon as you set up a quality publishing project and start building an audience that is interested in what you publish, someone comes along who has the brilliant idea of copying the fruit of your labor and making it their own.

Not infrequently, you discover that there are faithful duplicates of physician data your content around the web , often without even a miserable link that would at least assure you of the moral value of the authorship of the work (and maybe a few visits, eh).

All that effort, all that time spent researching, formatting text, looking for attractive and relevant images, sharing on social networks to gain some traffic ... and then the first smart guy who comes along makes himself look good behind your back.

Well, you don't have to put up with these injustices! There is something you can do to find out who copied your content !

How dangerous is duplicate content?
We know that Google doesn't particularly like duplicates , and this dislike has given rise to the crusades that have affected those who deal with the creation of websites (those who have suffered the blows of Google Panda know what you risk!).

This doesn’t mean that if you host a piece of content that has a twin somewhere on the web, one of you will get slapped in the face and sent to page 100 of Google results.

If this were the case, there would be no product sheets that are repeatedly re-proposed on various e-commerce sites, no press releases, no quotes from famous people's speeches, not to mention the mere technical errors or naivety in the organization of pages that cause duplication of materials.
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