Subscribe to the RSS Feed
FreeWordpressThemes.us
Free WordPress Tutorials and Themes.

Stop Complaining About Scrapers and Start Taking Advantage of Them

January 15th, 2010 by admin

If you have a semi-popular blog, chances are you have a few scraper sites copying your posts directly from your feed. When you catch a site doing this, you’ll probably be pretty upset at first, seeing as they just copied all your hard work, and probably didn’t even give you credit. Instead of getting mad, get even.

In this post, I’ll go over some ways to do just this in WordPress by building links back to your blog (even when the scraper conveniently “forgot” to credit you):

  • How to use the RSS Footer plugin to insert links (or whatever other content you want) directly into your feed.
  • How to use FeedBurner FeedFlares to insert social bookmarking links in your feeds, plus your own custom-made flares.
  • How to install YARPP (Yet Another Related Posts Plugin) to automatically insert related post links into your feed.

Read on to see the rest, there’s a video too…

RSS Footer

This RSS Footer plugin by Yoast is a popular solution for adding copyright messages and other messages (including ads and links) to your feeds. It’s pretty simple to set up, after installing the plugin just customize the message you want to appear in the RSS footer of your posts.

RSS Footer

The default message in the screenshot includes a link to your post, as well as a link back to your blog. There are also a number of other parameters but the only one that really needs to be dynamic is the %%POSTLINK%% one.

I’ve seen people put image ads down there, even more text links back to pages on their site, and messages like “This post was stolen by a scraper.” Keep in mind, not only will these messages show up on splogs scraping your site, they’ll also show up in your feed (where actual people see it).

With that said, I probably wouldn’t recommend messages like “This post was stolen by a scraper” as your human RSS subscribers may not understand what that means.

Yet Another Related Posts Plugin

This is a plugin that I recommend for almost any blog. Pretty much, if you have enough posts to have related posts, use YARPP. It’s practically guaranteed to keep visitors on your site longer, as they tend to click through the various related posts to find more stuff

When first installing it, you may notice it doesn’t detect any related posts at first (even when you have a ton of blog posts). This is probably due to the “match threshold” being set too high, or the related posts cache hasn’t been built yet. Check out the YARPP FAQ for more information on this.

After installing it, you have the option of automatically displaying posts on your blog, as well as in your feed. Not only does this help keep bounce rates low, it is a good way to get deeplinks to your site from all the automated scrapers out there stealing your content.

RSS Footer + YARPP Screencast

In this screencast, I install the RSS footer plugin and go over some of the settings. I also show how I set up my YARPP settings here on Theme Lab, as well the option to display related posts in feeds.

Bonus: FeedBurner FeedFlare

FeedBurner FeedFlare is a service provided by, you guessed it, FeedBurner. If you’ve ever seen links like “Save this post to Delicious” or dynamic comment counts within feeds, this is how you do it.

After you’ve set up your FeedBurner feed, go to the “Optimize” tab in your account and activate FeedFlare. From here, there are a few “official” FeedFlares you can use.

Theme Lab Feed Flares

On Theme Lab, I use: Email This, Comments Count, and Save to Delicious, and also a couple custom ones with a link back to my homepage and to my Twitter. In hindsight, it might be better to link back to these two with the previously mentioned RSS Footer.

However, if you want to set up your own custom FeedFlare links like mine, what better way could there be than to look at the actual XML files I use myself?

After you’ve modified the XML files for own use (unless you want to have links back to me in every one of your posts) just upload them to your server and paste the URLs in the “Add New Flare” box.

Internal Linking

In addition to these techniques which obviously make things a lot easier, it’s also a good idea to include internal links within your actual posts. You’ll notice I do this quite a bit whenever I publish a post.

You could also use a plugin like Internal Link Building (need to subscribe to their RSS to download) to automatically set up links for certain keywords.

As always, use in moderation.

Conclusion

I personally haven’t used this before, but Tynt seems to come recommended when it comes to dealing with scrapers. If anyone has experience with this, I’d like to know about it in the comments.

Now, I’m sure some people will disagree with me about my stance on scrapers. I hate plagiarism just as much as everyone else. The point I’m trying to make is, instead of wasting time trying to fight scrapers, why not set up YARPP, an RSS footer, other internal links, and use them to your advantage instead?

I really don’t believe switching to excerpts is the answer, as opposed to full content feeds. You might deter scrapers, but really annoy your RSS subscribers at the same time. Which is more important?

Related posts:

  1. Use FeedBurner to Manage Your WordPress Feeds
  2. New Theme Lab Design by James McDonald
  3. 5 Quick Ways to Fix Up Your WordPress Theme
Written by - Visit Website

Posted in Theme Labs

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.