Fighting Copy Theft With Tynt Tracer
Quite a few weeks ago I noticed the Daily Mail run a cheeky little script on its web copy that when you copied and pasted an excerpt from one of its articles you also included a link back to the page where it was lifted from, for example :
The dementia affecting hundreds of thousands of Britons may be a legacy of the Second World War, a scientist has claimed.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1213703/Dementia-caused-Second-World-War-claims-scientist.html#ixzz0RGlrjtMy
Now, this script is free and available from Tynt Tracer – www.tynt.com – you have to sign-up, but it is all done in a matter of seconds.
The dashboard shows the number of times paragraphs, words or images get lifted from your site, as below :

Go ahead, try it, copy any text from this site and paste it into notepad or your preferred WYSIWYG and see if the attribute link is copied with it.
Of course there are always ways around these things, most modern browsers you can turn javascript off and on in a few seconds and be away with all the copy you want from a site and Trynt Tracer, if it’s installed, will not have the foggiest that you’ve been. Also you can always just view the source code as well.
Anyways, i’m going to roll with it for a few weeks and see what information I can pick up about the users visiting this site, you never know I might even get a few attribution links generated in this time.
Also, I have another site that gets tons of traffic from Google’s image search that would be ideal for using Tynt Tracer on.













A rather nifty piece of code by the look of it. Would definitely be interested to hear about your experience with it in a few weeks.
Now that is rather crafty, never seen anything like that! Shall keep it in mind.
Question is… why would you want to copy and paste anything from the Daily Wail?
Aha, I do a lot of content creation for other blogs Ben, and sometimes I need to lift quotes or news snippets from online newspapers (majority of times with a source link back) to help with fact based stories.