Feeling Bitacle

Bitacle is repro­du­cing all my posts else­where, appar­ently fed by my RSS feed, but also gen­er­ating Trackback spam. I’ve found it’s also hap­pening on other blogs. It displays a load of advert­ising next to the posts, so is breaching the Creative Commons license on this site. Anyone know anything about this outfit, or what to do about it?

Update: this is all over the place. Suggested solu­tions: an .htaccess rule that blocks their IP, use short feeds, pester google and yahoo, make sure big media owners find out their content is being ripped.

Another update: There’s another splogger repub­lishing my content at web2.0stores.com. This one isn’t even linking back to the originals.

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5 comments to Feeling Bitacle

  • Hi, Ian

    Yeah, this Bitacle splog has received a lot of atten­tion lately. although, as far as I can tell, it’s just another splog — maybe more soph­ist­ic­ated and ambi­tious in terms of whose content, and how much content, it steals — but oth­er­wise, just another splog.

    The more I think over this splogger problem, the more I think it’s futile and even coun­ter­pro­ductive to try to hunt down and shut down indi­vidual sploggers.

    They’re not the real problem. They’re just oppor­tun­ists. The REAL problem is that Google, Yahoo, and other online ad network pro­viders have their programs set up in such a way that actively *encour­ages* sploggers.

    It does no good to stamp out a few cock­roaches. You have to stop them from breeding.

    I just wrote more about this at Contentious: http://tinyurl.com/rvp7t

    Thanks!

    - Amy Gahran

  • Thanks for the great information.

    It’s where we draw the line between aggreg­ators and splogs, I guess — I publish a full text feed because I think it’s the right thing to do. But I don’t want someone else to make money out of my content without my per­mis­sion. The CC license is there for a reason. It’s also on my feed via feedburner.

    Good point that the advert­ising networks ought to be thinking a lot more about the value they are deliv­ering to both pub­lishers and advertisers.

  • “the advert­ising networks ought to be thinking a lot more about the value they are deliv­ering to both pub­lishers and advertisers.”

    Google and Yahoo espe­cially should be mindful of how their encour­age­ment of splogs directly under­mines the use­ful­ness of their own search engines.

    Also, I guess if you’re getting a link back from a splog and that makes you happy, then that’s your business. Personally, Id have a problem with that, but to each their own.

    - Amy Gahran

  • As I said, it breaches the Creative Commons license I have put on this site. So, yes, I do have a problem.

    Any idea how to proceed?

  • Ian,
    Rather than repeat myself on a hundred dif­ferent blogs I updated my post where you left your comments with links to a way to deal with scrapers I’ve used suc­cess­fully many times. That said: unless you set your RSS feeds to short you are doomed to repeat this same thing on a pretty regular basis– like it or not.

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