Entries Tagged 'info' ↓

How YOUR tech blog posts are RIPPED OFF while you sleep!

Technical blog posts are ripped off in this fashion
You work hard on your posts…

So you get an idea for a blog post. You mull it over, finally commit to it, and start to get down to work. Now that you’re in it for the long haul there’s probably a good time sink involved. Depending on your writing style your work involved might be something like:

  • Researching the topic so you understand it really as well as you think you do.
  • Thinking about the points you are going to make, what order makes some sort of sense.
  • Collecting and wiring up good outbound links to more authoritative, encylopedic reference for your readers to continue on with.
  • (HOLY CRAP, DON’T READ THIS!!!) Thinking up a good magnetic headline to grab some interest.
  • Thinking about how to break up your content into manageable, scannable bits.
  • Searching for / creating / farming-out some for some pithy images to break the monotony of endless text.

If you are into copywriting, a slow worker, disturbed by animals, etc, this process may be long and soul crushing.

And the payoff is….

You birth your creation into the wild. You lord it over your friends, shamelessly promote it on a few social networks, get your mom to check it out, etc. As people add comments and you watch the visitors count in your analytics, you get that satisfying ego-boost you had hoped for. You can feel your social capital on the rise. Rad.

And then, YOU ARE RIPPED OFF!

Ok, so here’s my story. As avid readers of www.mikeduncan.com you’ve undoubtedly read my scintillating post SQLite on .NET - Get up and running in 3 minutes. Catchy, isn’t it? It was birthed into the world as the timestamp clearly reminds us on January 15th, 2008. People seemed to dig it, a good time was had by all. Maybe *too good* of a time.

My sqlite on .net blog post, check it out!

TWO DAYS after my post was out in the wild, I started seeing some interesting inbound links coming in from InfoQ, a tech news - paid story aggregator type site. While not somewhere I go often, their site is indeed large, thriving, and as it turns out, morally bankrupt. It seems that one Robert Bazinet has a story on the front page of the 250,000 unique visitors per month, page rank 7, mega-site that is InfoQ.com cleverly titled:

A very original blog post

Up and Running with SQLite on .Net in 3 Minutes

Come on,…… really? That’s really what its called? You bet. So what do we find in this lovely post? You got it, exactly my post, just stripped of its sexy mikeduncan.com voice and replaced with a few business buzzwords.

  • The steps of what to do are the same.
  • And in the same order.
  • And the arbitrary number of minutes is the same.
  • And the links to the further sources are the same.
  • And the footer says "InfoQ.com and all content copyright © 2006-2007" !!!

Who told you to put the balm on?

You’re damn right Jackie!

Ok, to set the record straight, they do give a shout-out to me briefly mentioning I have a post similar to this on my site, and if you bothered to go to my site, you’d see that they are maybe-admittedly re-hashing my post? Or maybe you wouldn’t.

The Pros and Cons of this intellectual larceny…

So let’s see what to make of this situation in inverse pro/con order (to build suspense)

Cons:

  • My personal work and time invested in this post is being leveraged for InfoQ / Robert Bazinet’s big-uppance.
  • Organic search traffic relating to SQLite on .net will ultimately be split between mikeduncan.com and InfoQ.  As a corporate, constantly updated entity, they have a lot of page rank that will flow down into their version of my story, probably trumping mine in the SERPs in the long run.

Pros:

  • InfoQ will send me some traffic I might not otherwise get from regular infoq readers who don’t already know about my post from DotNetKicks, Google, my blog feed, etc.
  • I gain greater *perceived authority* (if thats even possible) by being linked to from a supposedly authoritative, news publishing source.
  • My ego still gets boosted in some small way in that someone thought my post was worth paraphrasing and submitting. Perhaps they got $20 out of it.

The *real* pro though, is I have now have this very topic to write about on mikeduncan.com, which I’m sure will be identifiable to a lot of other folks. Looking through InfoQ, there are indeed many stories just like this one that are just paraphrased versions of other bloggers hard work. Many other people are knowingly or not, in the same boat. (Maybe it’s time to do a search on InfoQ ey?)

You WILL be next!!!

Clearly any blog is up for thievery a source of inspiration. If indeed you as a writer get a kickback for stories are accepted on InfoQ, why not scan DotNetKicks, maybe DZone, looking for catchy stories you can paraphrase into cold, hard Jacksons? A quick look through Infoq shows a number of posts that are similarly just paraphrased summaries of bloggers work. Just picking the first one on the front page that that I recognized by the title,

Implementing NOLOCK with LINQ to SQL and LINQ to Entities for instance is just a Scott Hansleman post rehashed. Again, Scott is quickly credited, but then pretty much his whole post is just copied over into the Infoq system. Scott, on one hand, being in a tech evangelist role and all around Dude, is probably fine with getting the word out however he can. On the other hand, Scott does have advertisers and runs diabetes research fundraising campaigns through his site. A part of his fundraising ability relies upon the popularity of and traffic to his authoritative site based on his original content.  Maybe Scott is OK with this, maybe not.  Either way I doubt InfoQ told him they were rehashing his posts.

My direct boss and good friend is a lawyer, but does not play one on tv. He advised me that I could certainly send them a letter asking for the post to be removed, but would probably not really be worth his time as he had compelling video games scheduled to be played. Thinking about the above mentioned pros and cons I think I’m ok with the net gain on this one.

Hmm, the capital of France is The Hartford Whalers?  Oh well, Must be right.

 What do YOU think?

Ok, the internet is all about learning, communicating, extending what has come before, standing on the shoulders of giants, blah blah blah.  I’m not really trying to push for some sort of copyright policing, I like the wild west days we are in.  At the same time, when it happens to you, it’s kind of phony / corny in a Catcher In the Rye way. Particularly the InfoQ.com and all content copyright © 2006-2007 footer. 

What do you, esteemed readers, think? Should I just quit complaining and consider it flattery?  Or is this something that as tech writers / bloggers we should be more in tune with.  With Gawker Media type bloggers making 9K a month, perhaps this isn’t just bitching.  Original content is certainly some kind of currency these days be it devalued US dollars, career credibility, or promoting charities. Tell me your tales! 

If you don’t post comments, I’ll just cut and paste some from your blogs into here anyway, copyright 2008 mikeduncan.com. Man, you’ve read this far, if you feel like it, hook a humble blogger up with some diggs or whatever.  Your awesomeness will be embiggened, I promise.

kick it on DotNetKicks.com

Why should you read this blog anyway?

I’ve been where you are. I have what you want.

Maybe you’ve read some OOP pattern books or heard some furtive whispers in the hallway about this whole rumored ‘doing things the right way’ thing. Or perhaps whilst Googling MSDN docs, you’ve happened upon suspiciously clever A-lister .Net blogs where oh-so-clever Californians or Canadians are constantly talking about their “NHibernate” or their fancy pants “mock objects” for “Unit Testing” or using a bunch of “curly quotes” all the time. Just exactly, what the hell is going on?

Where do these people work? Where do they get the time to do these things? Let’s face it, your boss is all about pushing out code, not you faffing about trying some sort of pie-in-the-sky best practices. How are you going to tap into these alt-coder / hacker / tron / war games / the matrix patterns when you are in a beige cubicle next to the emo graphics guy or maybe the Dell laser printer if you are lucky? What exactly is this stuff all about, and will you look cool if you start doing it?

The answer is of course, in this blog.

Here you’ll find:

  • sensationally adequate code snippets
  • tools for automating quotidian developer tasks
  • the wisdom of my innumerable failures
  • masonic-like secrets as to which of the patterns, frameworks, and hyphenated-buzzword-phrases are worth sneaking in when no one is looking

The bottom line:

Some tools, practices, frameworks, and patterns are geekily complicated and not worth pursuing outside of code-nerd one-upsmanship. Others however, are powerful time savers and will add to your subgenius slack and metrosexual code-slinging cred. This blog is your little black book for scoring some dead sexy development, instead of churning out the usual ‘great-personality’ variety that has your friends talking behind your back.