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Re: Software to transform content

On Mon, 01 May 2006 16:30:25 +0100, Roy Schestowitz
<newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>__/ [ Big Bill ] on Monday 01 May 2006 14:45 \__
>
>> On Mon, 01 May 2006 09:47:44 +0100, Roy Schestowitz
>> <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> 
>>>__/ [ schoenfeld1@xxxxxxxxx ] on Monday 01 May 2006 09:23 \__
>>>
>>>> Anyone know of any software which transforms content? I would like to
>>>> transform (rewording, etc) public domain content and post it on my
>>>> site.
>>>
>>>*plonk*
>>>
>>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML_scraping
>> 
>> My answer's better!
>
>
>Did I offer an answer at all? *smile*
>
>
>__/ [ Big Bill ] on Monday 01 May 2006 14:45 \__
>
>> On Mon, 01 May 2006 11:15:57 +0200, Borek
>> <m.borkowski@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> 
>>>On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:23:13 +0200, <schoenfeld1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Anyone know of any software which transforms content? I would like to
>>>> transform (rewording, etc) public domain content and post it on my
>>>> site.
>>>
>>>Ask Dave, that's more or less what he did on his classic literature site.
>>>
>>>Borek
>> 
>> Actually it isn't because he didn't re-write any of it, he just
>> slapped it in as is. CARP, I think, can do that. This guy's looking
>> for something that'll render the original material with the same
>> meaning overall but worded differently so it won't get duplicate
>> penalties, the Holy Grail for Adsense sites. They're working on it!
>> Now go find an affiliate forum and ask there.
>
>
>Yes, it's a good answer.

I was referring to the brain answer, actually. But this is a good
answer too!

> It reminds me of some of the ideas expressed in:
>
>        http://www.powazek.com/2006/04/000576.html
>
>There was also an article on the WSJ (couldn't find the link) where the
>author investigated the 'black market' of plagiarised content. In this story
>he outlines, he gets paid to artifically join a collection of scraped
>content. He competes with people in the East and gets paid a ridiculous wage
>for this text stitching chore. The stolen content becomes hard to identify,
>even with tools like copyscape, I imagine.

Apart from copyscape, do you know of any? I can only think of Googling
for standout phrases ("It was a dark and stormy night" etc.)

BB
-- 

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