Content Strategy & SEO

JEzechukwuma2
Participant

About Duplicate Content

SOLVE

 In the issue of canonicalization, 
What if there's a cross domain duplicate of content,  involving a website that I'm not in control of. In fact I'm not even aware of it.
Let's take for instance, another website copied my content and published an exact copy of it, and hence there's no canonicalization. So the ranking power of both sites would be diffused?
Please How can this be resolved?

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1 Accepted solution
karstenkoehler
Solution
Hall of Famer | Partner
Hall of Famer | Partner

About Duplicate Content

SOLVE

Hi @JEzechukwuma2,

 

Dealing with cross-domain duplicate content can indeed pose challenges to your website's search engine rankings. When another website copies your content and publishes it as their own without canonicalization, it can potentially lead to diluted ranking power and confusion for search engines in determining the original source of the content. However, there are steps you can take to address this issue.

 

If someone is in fact copying your content, you should first contact the website owner and, as a last resort, submit a DMCA takedown.

 

ChatGPT is providing great step-by-step instructions here:

 


  1. Identify the Duplicate Content: Regularly monitor your content using tools like Google Alerts or specialized plagiarism checkers to identify instances of duplicate content across the web.

  2. Contact the Website Owner: If you discover another website has copied your content without permission, try reaching out to the website owner and politely ask them to remove or properly attribute the content. Provide evidence that you are the original creator.

  3. Use Proper Attribution: If the other website insists on keeping the content, suggest adding a canonical tag to their duplicate content pages. This tag indicates that your content is the original source and helps search engines understand which version to prioritize in search results.

  4. Disavow Low-Quality Links: If the copied content is leading to backlinks that you don't want associated with your site (e.g., from spammy or low-quality websites), you can use the Google Disavow Tool to ask Google not to consider those links when evaluating your site's credibility.

  5. Submit a DMCA Takedown: If the copied content is infringing on your copyright, you can file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) takedown request with the hosting provider of the infringing website. This can force the removal of the duplicate content.

  6. Focus on Original and High-Quality Content: Continuously create valuable and original content on your website. Search engines tend to favor authoritative sources, and having a strong track record of producing high-quality content can help protect your rankings.

  7. Monitor Your Rankings: Keep an eye on your search engine rankings for the affected content. If you notice a significant drop, it might be worth addressing the issue more aggressively.

  8. Disavow Links if Necessary: If the duplicate content is causing significant harm to your rankings and you are unable to get it removed, consider using the disavow tool to tell Google not to consider those links.


Remember that resolving cross-domain duplicate content can be a gradual process, and patience is key. While it's not always possible to completely eliminate the impact of duplicate content, taking these steps can help mitigate its negative effects and maintain the visibility of your original content in search results.

 

Hope this helps!

Karsten Köhler
HubSpot Freelancer | RevOps & CRM Consultant | Community Hall of Famer

Beratungstermin mit Karsten vereinbaren

 

Did my post help answer your query? Help the community by marking it as a solution.

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1 Reply 1
karstenkoehler
Solution
Hall of Famer | Partner
Hall of Famer | Partner

About Duplicate Content

SOLVE

Hi @JEzechukwuma2,

 

Dealing with cross-domain duplicate content can indeed pose challenges to your website's search engine rankings. When another website copies your content and publishes it as their own without canonicalization, it can potentially lead to diluted ranking power and confusion for search engines in determining the original source of the content. However, there are steps you can take to address this issue.

 

If someone is in fact copying your content, you should first contact the website owner and, as a last resort, submit a DMCA takedown.

 

ChatGPT is providing great step-by-step instructions here:

 


  1. Identify the Duplicate Content: Regularly monitor your content using tools like Google Alerts or specialized plagiarism checkers to identify instances of duplicate content across the web.

  2. Contact the Website Owner: If you discover another website has copied your content without permission, try reaching out to the website owner and politely ask them to remove or properly attribute the content. Provide evidence that you are the original creator.

  3. Use Proper Attribution: If the other website insists on keeping the content, suggest adding a canonical tag to their duplicate content pages. This tag indicates that your content is the original source and helps search engines understand which version to prioritize in search results.

  4. Disavow Low-Quality Links: If the copied content is leading to backlinks that you don't want associated with your site (e.g., from spammy or low-quality websites), you can use the Google Disavow Tool to ask Google not to consider those links when evaluating your site's credibility.

  5. Submit a DMCA Takedown: If the copied content is infringing on your copyright, you can file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) takedown request with the hosting provider of the infringing website. This can force the removal of the duplicate content.

  6. Focus on Original and High-Quality Content: Continuously create valuable and original content on your website. Search engines tend to favor authoritative sources, and having a strong track record of producing high-quality content can help protect your rankings.

  7. Monitor Your Rankings: Keep an eye on your search engine rankings for the affected content. If you notice a significant drop, it might be worth addressing the issue more aggressively.

  8. Disavow Links if Necessary: If the duplicate content is causing significant harm to your rankings and you are unable to get it removed, consider using the disavow tool to tell Google not to consider those links.


Remember that resolving cross-domain duplicate content can be a gradual process, and patience is key. While it's not always possible to completely eliminate the impact of duplicate content, taking these steps can help mitigate its negative effects and maintain the visibility of your original content in search results.

 

Hope this helps!

Karsten Köhler
HubSpot Freelancer | RevOps & CRM Consultant | Community Hall of Famer

Beratungstermin mit Karsten vereinbaren

 

Did my post help answer your query? Help the community by marking it as a solution.

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