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Yesterday I received a DMCA violation notice from my host. The complaint comes from a competing website. They weren't clear in what was the copyright infringement. However, I did use their image and credit them so I assumed that's what it was. I removed the image immediately and notified my host. But I just revisited the complaint and now I think the complaint is saying that my entire article is copyright infringement. I would like to know what you guys think.
Here are the details:
A while back I asked one of my writers to create an article about 14 Maddening Things Students Experience at College in Wisconsin (made up title).
The writer found some similar articles about the subject mixed them up and rewrote them. Four of those items came from a competing website. The writer submitted the article to me and I ran it through Copyscape premium. Copyscape came back saying it's clean.
The article on the competing website in question is like 11 Crazy Subjects Students Study in Wisconsin Colleges. When I compare some of the writing from the article my writer submitted, yes, there are some similarities and words and phrases from the competing site. However, it's also quite different, uses different images, has more items in the list, the title is different, and Copyscape felt the writing was different enough that our article was considered unique.
So my question is, if the owner of the competing website does indeed feel like my entire article is copyright infringement, does he have a leg to stand on?
Here are the details:
A while back I asked one of my writers to create an article about 14 Maddening Things Students Experience at College in Wisconsin (made up title).
The writer found some similar articles about the subject mixed them up and rewrote them. Four of those items came from a competing website. The writer submitted the article to me and I ran it through Copyscape premium. Copyscape came back saying it's clean.
The article on the competing website in question is like 11 Crazy Subjects Students Study in Wisconsin Colleges. When I compare some of the writing from the article my writer submitted, yes, there are some similarities and words and phrases from the competing site. However, it's also quite different, uses different images, has more items in the list, the title is different, and Copyscape felt the writing was different enough that our article was considered unique.
So my question is, if the owner of the competing website does indeed feel like my entire article is copyright infringement, does he have a leg to stand on?