It seems
everyone who has a website is worried about having their copyright violated by
web content thieves. But are web content copyright violations really such a big
problem?
True, web content theft has the potential to destroy the web
completely if taken to extremes. What would be the point of creating anything
if it were immediately stolen?
But by the same token, shoplifting has
the potential to destroy retail if taken to its logical conclusion. Yet that
hasn't stopped chain stores from reaping a fortune. As in the shopping mall, so
on the web: the system still works because the vast majority of users don't
steal.
One of the biggest hidden risks of web content theft is in fact
that webmasters will overreact to the perceived threat. Could copyright theft
fears create an atmosphere of mistrust among publishers, just as phishing and
fraud have created an atmosphere of distrust among web users? While we are
nowhere near that point yet, it's still worth giving the hysteria a reality
check before it gets out of control.
Dangers of Obsessing over Web
Content Theft and Internet Copyright Violations
1. Unnecessary
Web Content Copyright Registration
Some paranoid webmasters have
actually gone to the trouble and expense of registering the copyright of their
work with the government--often at the urging of paid services that charge a
hefty fee. Yet copyright registration provides no protection against theft. It
only provides statutory damages if somehow you ever take the thief to court,
AND he or she shows up AND can pay (unlikely).
Copyright registration
not only costs money. It also takes time. If everyone were to register
copyright, the flow of information on the web would be impeded.
2.
Chilling Effect of Web Content Copyright Violation Paranoia
Some
extremely paranoid website owners have stopped publishing new content--a
guaranteed Pyrrhic victory if there ever was one.
3. Wasted Energy
and Resources
In short, paranoia over web content theft distracts
crucial energy from the creative process of building a website. Every moment
you spend wringing your hands over web content theft is a moment you aren't
spending building your site.
4. Mostly Fueled by Ignorance of the
Real Internet Copyright Situation
Much of the anxiety around
internet copyright violations is caused by three groundless myths about the
dire consequences for your website if you are a victim:
a.
internet copyright violations are hard to pursue (thanks to search engines,
copyright violations are easier to identify and punish than in print);
b. your site will suffer a duplicate content penalty in search
engines;
c. content theft will completely destroy the unique
value of your website.
To realize how groundless the last two fears
are, you only have to look at any newspaper website, stuffed with syndicated
content from the newswires.
In short, though website content theft and
other internet copyright violations corrode the ties that bind the web
together, they must not distract from the real business of the web: sharing
information, ideas, and art. Keep publishing new content. If you don't, the web
content thieves have won.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joel Walsh is a
website content
writer.















