Recently a common advert that is appearing on numerous places in particular Pirate Bay seems to be an advert saying that "Google pays me £128 per hour" or "Google pays me $76 per hour", it leads to a page that pretends to be the UK version of a News website and leads to the finance page, the other parts of the site do not lead anywhere (news, sport etc), the disclaimer at the bottom says:
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS CAREFULLY READ AND AGREE TO PURCHASE TERMS BELOW BEFORE ORDERING:
We are not affiliated in any way with CNN, WebTV, News Channel 7, ABC, NBC, CBS, U.S. News or FOX. CNN, WebTV, News Channel 7, ABC, NBC, CBS, U.S. News, FOX, and Consumer Reports are all registered trademarks of their respective owners. � All trademarks on this web site whether registered or not, are the property of their respective owners. The authors of this web site are not sponsored by or affiliated with any of the third-party trade mark or third-party registered trade mark owners, and make no representations about them, their owners, their products or services.
It is important to note that this site and the stories depicted above is to be used as an illustrative example of what some individuals have achieved with this/these products. This website, and any page on the website, is based loosely off a true story, but has been modified in multiple ways including, but not limited to: the story, the photos, and the comments. Thus, this blog, and any page on this website, are not to be taken literally or as a non-fiction story. This blog, and the results mentioned on this blog, although achievable for some, are not to be construed as the results that you may achieve on the same routine. I UNDERSTAND THIS WEBSITE IS ONLY ILLUSTRATIVE OF WHAT MIGHT BE ACHIEVABLE FROM USING THIS/THESE PRODUCTS, AND THAT THE STORY DEPICTED ABOVE IS NOT TO BE TAKEN LITERALLY. This page receives compensation for clicks on or purchase of products featured on this site.
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To me this basically means, everything on the website is a lie and not to be trusted!
Sunday, 14 November 2010
newsdaily7.com scam - work at home mum scam
Tuesday, 5 May 2009
Protect your content and make a bigger profit - Stop content scrapers!
Autoblogging is all the rage these days and the chances are that your well-written thought out articles will be stolen and re-used by another blogger without them even lifting a finger. Because they will not have to think up anything, they can put their time and energy into ensuring they have a better page ranking and there's a chance they'll be making more money than you with your content. This isn't fair obviously and the firt thing that needed to be combatted are Content scrapers which are programs that scour the web for relevant content and then send them to the person running the programme.
There are 3 tools which can help combat people stealing your content.
These are:
Copyscape - A search engine which searches the internet for content which exactly matches yours. Go to www.copyscape.com and type in your URL. Then report any stolen content you find. You can also submit a banner of theirs to your site, which may ward off potential thieves.
Fairshare - This second tool is perhaps the most useful, the majority of content scraping is done through RSS feeds and this website hunts out any work of yours that has been stolen, all you have to do is go to the website www.fairshare.com, add your feed URL (if you are using blogger this can be found in the settings tab), sign up and wait 24 hours. You can then monitor it from then on.
Tracer - The last one is probably the most ruthless and also the most succesful but the efficiency comes at a price, it slows down your webpage considerably. To get this one to work you have to go to http://tcr1.tynt.com/ - then you have to add the java code in to your blog somwehere, this nifty gadget picks up on people copy and pasting or saving photos from your blog and automatically adds a link back to your webpage.