The Story
In late March, part of my personal website was stolen and reappeared elsewhere on the internet. Obviously I didn’t give anyone permission to use any part of my personal website for any reason, so this was something very fishy.
I first discovered that my website (at least the home page) had been downloaded to someone’s PC desktop in Florida. Since I am located in Tennessee, this in and of itself was not right. I discovered the downloading through the use of site stats through StatCounter, an invisible web stat tracker. Once I noticed referring traffic from a location on someone’s desktop, I immediately asked fellow freelancers what was going on, and was confirmed that someone had indeed downloaded my site.
Since there was really no way for me to contact the person who decided to download my site, at that time all I could do was sit and wait and monitor the traffic. Then one day when I got back from school, I started seeing referral traffic from a domain of which I didn’t own. I followed the link, and there it was; part of my site looked like it was being used in the final part of another site.
At this point I wasn’t sure what I could do about it. But then I remembered that I had protected my site and other various works of mine using a nifty online copyright protection app called Myows. Thus, I proceeded into Myows (after being told to by the owner of the site) to open a case against this infringer. Once I opened the case and typed in the needed information, the next step was to send a cease and desist letter via email to the copyright infringer to remove the site immediately. Within the hour the page had been removed, and within two hours I had an apology email from the infringer.
The Background
Since then, the case in Myows had been resolved and so I closed the case. Never in a million years did I ever think I would have to use Myows to protect my work. I am not a well known designer (yet) and I don’t have a lot of work hanging around the internet, so the fact that someone did steal part of my home page of my site was quite a shock for this little student freelance designer out of the sticks of Tennessee.
This got me thinking, well if this person from Florida could steal my site and use it for their own use, then that means that anyone could take anyone else’s work and use it for their own, whether the original creator is well known or not.
Student freelancers, I believe, are probably more at risk in someone stealing their original works and it being used without their knowledge, because I don’t believe most student freelancers know much about protecting themselves when it comes to copyright infringement.
In the United States, the second you start creating an original work, no matter if it is a design, painting, sculpture, website, movie, prose, article, music, lyric, etc, it is protected under copyright law. The exception, as far as I know, is if you are working for someone for whom you are their employee and you are hired to create such works on an employee basis (meaning they take taxes out of your paycheck, pay you a W-2, provide you benefits if you are full time, etc), then your employer owns all the rights of what you create.
Freelancers, since we are working for ourselves, own the rights to everything we create from the moment we create it till the moment we pass it on to someone else in writing. Some freelancers will give all the rights to their clients; some provide limited rights, etc. Such arrangements need to be agreed upon in writing before the work is created and often includes additional compensation in exchange for the rights.
The Tracker
So how did I bust this person in Florida anyways? I mentioned StatCounter earlier, so I should probably explain a little more. StatCounter is an invisible site tracker that tracks visitors to your site. They offer a free service, which is the service I use. I have both my personal site and this site as projects in my account, so it tracks both sites. After installing the code, it will give you real time stats on your visitors, such stats as when they arrived, from what country, what browser they were using, where they came from, screen resolution, etc.
Since StatCounter keeps track of how visitors got to your site and where they go, this is how I was able to track the person that stole my site. By comparing IP address (yes it records those too), I was able to determine that the same person who infringed on my copyrights was the same one who downloaded the site about a week before.
StatCounter is great if you want to track stats on your site. The sole reason I signed up for StatCounter was to have some type of method in which I could attempt to find sites who have possibly infringed on my copyrights. The owner of Myows actually had his personal site stolen, and discovered it through StatCounter as well.
The Protector and Enforcer
The United States Copyright Office is a governmental agency who handles and manages copyrights and intellectual property for individuals and organizations in the United States (I stand corrected, as it is not the USPTO). If you feel as though you should need the full extent of the United States law and a record that you have created that original work, then you can register the copyright documentation through the USCO office and pay a fee to have it protected and documented. However, this is NOT required of anyone to be protected by copyright law.
If there is any situation arise where there is a question of who created the work first (for instance if a copyright infringement case went all the way to court, or you needed to prove you are the original creator), you need to have solid proof that you created the work before the other party gained this work somehow. This is where Myows is great.
Myows acts as a witness in the event that you need to defend your copyright. When you upload your work to Myows, it will date and timestamp the work (using the international date and time) and gives it a personalized number. Doing this provides a permanent record of when you created the work. It is recommended that you upload your work as you are working on it if you plan to show others.
After you have uploaded your original work to Myows, there is an option to open a case (as I described above). This is great as well because Myows was developed with the help of intellectual property lawyers to help set the system up. So their process in handing copyright infringement is recommended by lawyers. As I stated above, Myows created a cease and desist letter that I then sent to the copyright infringer. And well, you know the rest of the story.
You could say that I was fortunate not to have to proceed further with the case, but if I had to, Myows would have helped me with that as well. They will take you through the process of doing every necessary to make sure your work is removed, even to the point of sending a DMCA takedown notice to the infringers web site host provider (if your work appeared on a website).
The best part? Myows has a free service! You get 512 mb of storage for your original works. If you ever need to upgrade, it is affordable to do so. Myows is a one of a kind app, and it is a great free service for all freelancers, including student freelancers.
The Moral of the Story
Let my recent experience with a copyright infringer be a reminder to you. Even if you aren’t doing freelance full time, or just experimenting with freelancing, take the time to protect your work. Copyright infringement can happen to anyone, no matter if they are a big name or just a student. I hope the tools I provided above will help protect you against thieves on the internet.
Myows image used with permission from Max Guedy of Myows
Haha, I remember your post on Freelance Switch. It’s great that the problem has been resolved 🙂
Thank you Amber for this great article. I’m glad Myows was useful in solving your copyright dispute swiftly.
Hahaha Myows is a real something. I upload there most of my art works >.< I even suggested to them to soon create a WordPress plugin to be able to easily Myows-ify your blog, and they replied saying they actually loved my idea and actually wants to use it as a project… although now with the API release, I guess WordPress developers can do that job. :))
Amber,
First off, I’m glad that this was resolved amicably and that Myows was able to help. I’m fond of the system as well.
I do want to add first that you may want to see about registering your sites with FairShare (fairshare.cc) as they can track your blog’s content as it moves across the Web, letting you know about more cases. You can also use Copyscape to help track more static works or Google Alerts if you are willing to spend the time to find a good unique phrase.
Also, the USPTO doesn’t handle copyright matters, that’s the U.S. Copyright Office (copyright.gov). You can find information about how to register your Web site there.
Finally, if you do encounter any cases that you can’t handle quickly and easily, feel free to drop me a line and I’ll see what I can do. I’ve resolved over a thousand of these cases including 700 involving my own content.
Eager to help if I can!
Hi Jonathan,
I stand corrected, so I corrected the post.
My personal site is not on a blog platform, or any CMS for that matter. It is straight up HTML and CSS documents. This is why I signed up for StatCounter to catch this sort of activity.
Thanks for the comment!
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I’m thankful that there is an app like Myows that helped during the situation. I am not sure what I would have done otherwise!
Welcome for the help!
If you’re using straight HTML, try setting up a few Google Alerts (google.com/alerts) to catch those who don’t copy and paste your HTML, just your text, has worked wonders for me over the years with my poetry.
Hope this helps!
That rocks. And to write an article about it is the best way for an siteowner to send a warning signal which is covered in information.
I’ve done the same early this year. The reason why was a client who had very courius ideas about the quantity of images which he could claiming from a photoshooting for free.
He had pressure and threating me. So I had to think about what to do. Because we are in need to protect our reputation…
I’ve done the same like you did. I’ve wrote an article which are leaving no doubt that I’ve had acting in accordance to the law and the usual procedure.
In the following months I’ve checked my reputation via dialogue with a lot of poeple in my hometown: it works. No slander.
Your article collateral to copyright protection is well done.
I’ve been studying copyright infringement and decided to search the web for my images. I found a picture I took on some stranger’s site; you say I have a way to make them take it down? ?