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Watch for these Article Writing Scams...
So I've gone through a roller-coaster ride trying to find a decent article writer. I tried one who did well for a few orders, and then the quality hit the floor. Then I started writing all of my own articles, but this takes way too long for what is supposed to be a passive business. So yesterday I tried three more people. One of them already got back to me with the four articles I tried them on.
This person boasts in their sales thread on the forum that all articles are passed as unique through CopyScape before they are emailed out. So check out what I saw when I put it through my own premium CopyScape account (picture above).
What you are seeing is an article after I went in and edited some of it! All of the parts that are highlighted are the exact same words featured in the article I was given. This person literally searched eHow.com, found a similar article, and copy-pasta'd directly into a Word file and emailed it to me. I got this crap on four articles. The only reason some of it is white and not highlighted is because I edited as I was reading.
What you see is a 57% similarity. CopyScape found six other pages where the other 43% came from. Unbelievable. If you are outsourcing content, you MUST get a CopyScape account and check every article.
Spintax
There are other scams that people try to pull. One of them is copy and pasting a chunk of words into a spinner and then just spinning a copy. Some of you guys may not have heard of this. A spinner creates "spintax", which is a spin on the word syntax (pun intended!?!?). It is crap like this: {Today|Yesterday} {I|we} {sold|scammed} that idiot on Trickle Cheddar {some|a buttload} of {stolen|copy-pasta'd|ripped off} {articles|blog posts}. The spinner software goes in and randomly selects words from within the brackets to form unique articles. So watch out for that one. They usually don't sound real intelligent because it takes time to choose the synonyms that make sense instead of letting the computer choose. Most of these idiots will let the computer choose. The article ends up reading like a Martian wrote it.
Invalid HTML
Another one to look out for is people will copy and paste an entire article, and then hide single letters as the ASCII characters or whatever it is. They'll email you an HTML file so you don't notice that some of the letters are really crap like "&a42cQ". That way it passes CopyScape and passes your eye. But this will get you banned or deindexed in the search engines as well. This one is really low.
Article Writing Scams Are #*&$@!
So watch out for the copy-pasta. Watch our for the spyntax. And watch out for invalid HTML tricks. These are all scams that content writers will pull on you if you aren't equipping yourself with the tools and methods of protection. CopyScape is your best friend as far as article writing scams and outsourcing go. Use it. It's like 2 cents per check or something. Way worth it.
Originally Posted on March 3rd, 2011 on