Duplicate content - I'm confused...

Michelle Carvill

Free Member
Dec 18, 2008
364
64
Maidenhead
Hi there
I've read various stuff (accept everything, believe nothing!) about duplicate content - and I am aware that Google have guidelines on it. Having read these and other docs, I have to say I'm still confused. I'm not using duplicate content to 'dupe' the search engines - but I am posting for example links to my blog articles on Digg and other such sites. They ask for a link back to the article, which I am assuming they realise is hosted on a website - which is indeed duplicate content. So I'm confused. What's the go? All advice welcome.
 

Write My Site

Free Member
Jul 21, 2006
1,305
147
A link is simply a direction to content posted elsewhere - this is fine, in fact it's a big part of what the internet is all about. Duplicate content means posting the same content, word-for-word, on different websites. Google doesn't like that: it values unique content.

If you're ever in a situation where, for example, a competitor copies the text from your website and publishes it on their own site you should act immediately or you risk being blacklisted. First you would send them a "cease and desist" letter ordering them to remove the content, and if that failed you would report them to Google using the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act).
 
Upvote 0
If you're ever in a situation where, for example, a competitor copies the text from your website and publishes it on their own site you should act immediately or you risk being blacklisted. First you would send them a "cease and desist" letter ordering them to remove the content, and if that failed you would report them to Google using the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act).


Is that really the case or do Google just ignore the sites that have used the duplicate text.
 
Upvote 0

fisicx

Moderator
Sep 12, 2006
46,659
8
15,359
Aldershot
www.aerin.co.uk
...but I am posting for example links to my blog articles on Digg and other such sites. They ask for a link back to the article, which I am assuming they realise is hosted on a website - which is indeed duplicate content. So I'm confused. What's the go? All advice welcome.

This isn't duplicate content - is just cross link linking, pingbacks and other connections that are the arteries along which the blood of the interweb flows.
 
Upvote 0

FireFleur

Free Member
Oct 29, 2008
1,881
440
It sounds like the article is existing in two locations? You sort of say that, with definite duplicate content but hey you might just be meaning the actual text link.

If the article is duplicated, then you do run a slight risk that the second article won't count. If that is the case, then just alter your original article a bit, a rework, and that will avoid the duplicate article problem.
 
Upvote 0

Latest Articles

Join UK Business Forums for free business advice