My Marketing Strategy
Nicolette Lemmon, President & Founder
Because of the Google Alerts that I monitor, a website crime was discovered using LemmonTree’s website. The alert cited a “Well come to Lemmontreeonline.com” and that raised my curiosity, so I clicked to it.
To my shock, a splash page led to a website that had pieces of our copy and design. The worst thing was that it looked to be a scam for selling a mutual fund.
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| Scraped site – LemmontreeOnline.com | Real site – LemmonTree.com |
As I quickly emailed my web gurus on staff, I noticed that the site had a 2009 copyright. That made me even more incredulous that it had been up for some time and we had no idea.
After researching the domain name owner and the site IP, George, our e-marketing director, contacted the IP hosting the site to alert them to copyright violation. He then reviewed the practice of “scraping.”
From Wikipedia, under site scraping it says, “Many scrapers will pull snippets and text from websites that rank high for keywords they have targeted.” The purpose is to make it easier to create another website, but it is also used to gather copy from sites to gain traffic either for ad revenue or to target unsuspecting people for a scam.
In our case, with “credit union” and “financial services marketing” being prominent word searches, the people who set up the scam site wanted to get people to click into their site. There was an ad for a mutual fund, but not a legit one!
While it is still difficult to uncover a scammer site using a proprietary site’s copy, Google Alerts is a fantastic tool for monitoring your brand. It is also helpful to monitor your personal identity as well.
What can you do to stop the scam site from using your copy? There are copyright laws that are broken, but it is critical to work with the web hosting company to shut the site down. This takes diligence in following up because the web hosting company must first contact their client to request they remove the material scraped from a copyright protected site. If the client does not, then the next action would be for the web hosting company to shut down the site.




(No Ratings Yet)4 Responses to How Can They Do That? A Case of Website Scraping
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I do to, Randy, since this scam site has been flying under the radar for months! Sometimes I get concerned about how much Google knows about everything and everyone on the Internet, however, this was truly one of the benefits of their service.
Bloggers need to familiarize themselves with “Digital Millennium Copyright Takedown Notices.” I now have a form letter I’d be happy to share with anyone. It is 100% effective. I no longer fart around with the blogger directly — waste of time. I simply send a DMCA takedown notice to their webhost.
Bloggers should also set up a special form of Google Alert. If you want to know when people are linking to your content, you should use the “link” search at Google. For this website, it would look like this:
link:mymarketinginsights.com
Thanks, Jeffrey, the link tool is a good one. Protecting our blog content and our brand online is critical. It is interesting how easy it is for people to pluck content. I’d like to have a copy of your letter since you are willing to share!
That is unreal Nicolette. It’s great that you caught it. You try to build a reputable brand and to have someone try to scam other off your reputation is reprehensible. I hope they shut them down.