- Original Poster
- #1
Hi everyone,
I run a removals company and have been operating for over 10 years. Over that time, I’ve built my website myself — including all text, service descriptions, structure, layout, CTAs, colour palette, photo galleries, and original images featuring my team in uniform.
This week, I discovered that another removals business (not in London but in a different town) has cloned my entire website, almost line by line. They’ve copied:
my pages structure
my service paragraphs
my categories
my CTAs
my colour palette
my fonts
EXACT CLONE
The only things they changed were their company name within the text paragraphs or titles, logo, phone number, and operating town.
Most importantly, they’re still using my original photographs, including ones clearly showing my staff in uniform and performing work. These images were taken by me for my business and are copyrighted.
They are actively using this cloned website to trade and generate leads, UK landline, mobile, WhatsApp
I’ve already gathered evidence (screenshots, PDFs, URLs, timestamps, etc.) and I’m planning to send a cease-and-desist, giving them 48 hours to take the site down, followed by:
- a copyright complaint to their hosting provider
- a takedown request to Google
- a registrar complaint (it’s a .uk domain)
and possibly an IPEC small claim for damages if they ignore it
Before I proceed, I’d appreciate advice from anyone who has dealt with something similar:
Is IPEC (small claims track) suitable for clear-cut copyright + passing-off cases like this?
Are damages for commercial use of original images typically awarded in these cases?
How responsive are hosting companies and registrars when a cloned site is reported with strong evidence?
Is it worth sending the cease-and-desist first, or should I go straight to DMCA/registrar?
I’m not naming the business or posting URLs — just looking for general guidance from others who’ve been through this.
Thanks in advance.
I run a removals company and have been operating for over 10 years. Over that time, I’ve built my website myself — including all text, service descriptions, structure, layout, CTAs, colour palette, photo galleries, and original images featuring my team in uniform.
This week, I discovered that another removals business (not in London but in a different town) has cloned my entire website, almost line by line. They’ve copied:
my pages structure
my service paragraphs
my categories
my CTAs
my colour palette
my fonts
EXACT CLONE
The only things they changed were their company name within the text paragraphs or titles, logo, phone number, and operating town.
Most importantly, they’re still using my original photographs, including ones clearly showing my staff in uniform and performing work. These images were taken by me for my business and are copyrighted.
They are actively using this cloned website to trade and generate leads, UK landline, mobile, WhatsApp
I’ve already gathered evidence (screenshots, PDFs, URLs, timestamps, etc.) and I’m planning to send a cease-and-desist, giving them 48 hours to take the site down, followed by:
- a copyright complaint to their hosting provider
- a takedown request to Google
- a registrar complaint (it’s a .uk domain)
and possibly an IPEC small claim for damages if they ignore it
Before I proceed, I’d appreciate advice from anyone who has dealt with something similar:
Is IPEC (small claims track) suitable for clear-cut copyright + passing-off cases like this?
Are damages for commercial use of original images typically awarded in these cases?
How responsive are hosting companies and registrars when a cloned site is reported with strong evidence?
Is it worth sending the cease-and-desist first, or should I go straight to DMCA/registrar?
I’m not naming the business or posting URLs — just looking for general guidance from others who’ve been through this.
Thanks in advance.