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Image this: You have the perfect campaign lined up, and are counting the days before you finally start paying off the cost of those ads.
Then, you receive an email from Amazon accusing you of copyright infringment. Your book has been taken down for now, until you prove it is, indeed, written by you.
This is what’s been happening to several authors, who have received the dreaded copyright notifications from Amazon. Specifically, they’ve received the following email:
Hello,
We are writing to you regarding the following book(s):
Title:[book title]
During a quality assurance review of your catalog, we found content (text and/or images) that is widely available on the web. You can do an online search for the content inside your books to discover which sites are offering the content for free. Copyright is important to us – we want to make sure that no author or other copyright holder has their work claimed and sold by anyone else.
As a result, the book(s) have been removed from sale from Amazon. If you wish to publish this content, please make updates to the books above and all similar books in your catalog and notify content-review@amazon.com with the following:
1. The URLs for all websites where this content is published
2. An explanation as to why the content is available onlineIf the books are in the public domain, please confirm this and include the information you used to make this determination. We may request additional information to confirm the public domain status.
For additional information, you can reference our Guide to Kindle Content Quality: https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A1MMQ0JHRBEINX&tag=pearseus-20
If any of your submissions fail to comply with our Content Guidelines, your account may be terminated or you may lose access to optional KDP services.
We appreciate your understanding.
Best regards,
Amazon KDP
The problem with this notification is that sometimes (though not always) Amazon takes down your book immediately. Which can come at an unfortunate time, like a book launch or in the middle of a big promo. It also seems to make no difference whether the book in question was found on a pirate site or a legitimate one. So, what are you to do?
Keep Calm And…
One option is to opt for a DRM lock when you first publish your book. However, this takes pirates a couple of minutes to remove and can frustrate real readers. Also, you can’t un-DRM a book later on. So, I’d personally advise against it.
Also, when launching a book, wait for a few days (I suggest up to a week) before you schedule any promos. That way, if you receive the dreaded copyright notification you won’t lose any promo money.
Victims of piracy can also ask for the pirated copy to be removed, through a take-down notice known as a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notice. Here’s a great link to get you up-to-speed on how and when to use a DMCA.
As a small consolation, if your book has been pirated on Kindle Direct Publishing, you may be able to claim the royalties from the pirated works.
Don’t bother contacting customer service for copyright issues; go directly to the legal department. Amazon provides an online form for filing a copyright infringement notice, or you can email your own DMCA notice to Amazon’s legal department, via copyright@amazon.com.
Within a few days, the issue should be resolved.
It’s Not Enough! I Want Their Head!
If you’re in a fighting mood and want to fight piracy, you can get more proactive. Most pirate sites are hosted on at a hosting company but then re-distributed via CloudFlare, which is a service that hosts the content all over the world to make websites faster to load. Finding the real owners of the infringing websites can be tricky, but someone has already made a tool:
http://www.crimeflare.com/cfs.html
If you enter the pirate site name into that site, you will get an IP address (eg 166.62.6.80). By typing into Google “Whois 166.62.6.80” you get information on who really hosts that website – e.g GoDaddy. You can then send your DMCA takedowns to abuse@godaddy.com and legal@godaddy.com (or the equivalent contact email addresses for abuse reports of the respective host).
Before you get carried away, though, make sure that your book is really there. Most pirate sites don’t actually have any books. They use programs (called bots or spiders) that crawl Amazon and merely copy book details, then claim to have the books so that you pass on your personal information – and maybe even dump some malware on your computer in the process.
Reblogged this on Three hoodies save the world and commented:
Being a victim of the pirates this is timely advice.
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Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog.
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Thanks, Nicholas.
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I hope you never need to refer to this, but it’s good to know anyway 🙂
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Blasty is a fantastic tool to fight piracy. The takedown — horrifying! I can’t even imagine.
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I’m usually pretty cool, but yes, that thought made me sweat bullets!
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Nicholas, I am so glad you are on top of this for us all! And grateful.
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Aw, you! Thank you 🙂
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Reblogged this on The Write Stuff and commented:
Once again, Nicholas Rossis has shared some information that could be vital to any one of us some day. I highly recommend checking out this post. Hopefully, you’ll never have to use the information therein, but you never know.
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Thanks for this very informative post, Nicholas. I’ve shared everywhere I can think of. Once again, you are on top of stuff we ALL need to know!
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Thank you so much, Marcia 😀
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Good grief. They can steal from us and we have to go through hell to prove yourself. I’m going to have to really use the piracy sites I found out about. Thanks for the heads up
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Reblogged this on When Angels Fly.
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Thanks Nicholas. Really useful. Just hope I don’t ever need it!
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Same here! 🙂
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A very important post. I’ve saved it for further reference and reblogged it on Dragons Rule OK.
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Many thanks for that! 🙂
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Reblogged this on Dragons Rule OK. and commented:
This is a very important post on Copyright and Amazon from Nicholas Rossis
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Thanks, Nicholas. So NOT fair.
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Great information, Nicholas! Flagged! Hope I never have to reread it! 🎶 Christine
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I hear you 😀
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As always, you lead the fight for knowledge on such subjects, and share that without reservation. Good to know, not that I am currently in the market to publish anything of course.
Best wishes, Pete.
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That’s such a sweet thing to say, Pete. Thank you 😀
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Extremely valuable information to know. Thank you!
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Thank you, Mae 😀
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Reblogged this on Don Massenzio's Blog and commented:
Authors, here is a great post from Nicholas Rossis’ blog on the potential copyright issues you can face with Amazon.
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Reblogged this on Colleen Chesebro ~ Fairy Whisperer and commented:
Important information from Nicholas Rossis about Amazon and copyright infringement notices… a must read for Authors!
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Great article, Nicholas! Thanks for the heads-up! 🙂
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Thanks! Let’s hope we never have to worry about it 🙂
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Reblogged this on Steve Boseley and commented:
It’s a shame that we may need this at some point. As if it wasn’t tough enough already…
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Great article, thanks so much for this information. Reblogging this on shereena Badu for the future I have ebooks published on Amazon. Thank you
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Thank you so much for sharing, Shereena 🙂
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You’re welcome🙏
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Pingback: Amazon notifications regarding copyright- Reblog – Shereena Badu
Reblogged this on Anna Dobritt — Author.
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Good information, Nicholas! Thanks for sharing.
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Thanks! May you never need the links listed here 🙂
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Great information, Nicholas! Tell me, though, for future reference, how would you be able to prove infringement if it were the latter case of spiders bots? Still the same?
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From my experience dealing with Amazon, it’s not too hard explaining the situation to them. I’ve found it’s easier doing so on the phone, though.
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Reblogged this on The Indie Spot! and commented:
This is information all indie authors need to know.
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Great information to have on hand just in case. Thanks so much for sharing it, Nicholas.
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May you never need it 🙂
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Reblogged this on Pamela D. Beverly.
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There’s always something, isn’t there?
Very informative post, Nicholas.
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Thank you, Pamela! Yes, every day brings something new to this game 🙂
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Thanks, Nick. Shared across my pages …
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Thank you so much for sharing, Tina! It’s much appreciated 🙂
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Welcome, Nick 🙂
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Reblogged this on Die Erste Eslarner Zeitung – Aus und über Eslarn, sowie die bayerisch-tschechische Region!.
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Thank you for this valuable advice!!
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A pleasure! May you never need it 🙂
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Thank you for this, Nicholas. Shared on @bakeandwrite.
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Many thanks for sharing 😀
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Reblogged this on Smorgasbord – Variety is the spice of life and commented:
A very important post from Nicholas Rossis.. Piracy is more rampant than it ever was on the high seas and most of us have our books allegedly available on illegal sites.. This can cause problems with the books that we publish and are listed on Amazon.. to establish copyright for books they will do an online sweep and if they find a book out there that with your title they may send you a letter saying your book has been removed until you prove your ownership…Nicholas provides the fixes .. head over and read the entire article. #recommended
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Reblogged this on Kate McClelland.
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Reblogged this on Kim's Author Support Blog.
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Thanks for passing along the best of Nicholas on a regular basis, Kim (KimWrtr). You’re a gem.
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Reblogged this on Have We Had Help? and commented:
Authors beware!
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Pingback: Amazon Notifications Regarding Copyright | GeezWriter Blog
This is excellent information, Nicholas. I reblogged it on http://www.GeezWriter.com. When I saw the blurb from Kim Cox, I knew it was you before clicking it. You serve us all wonderfully! –StephenGeez
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Aw, you! Thank you 🙂
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Reblogged this on Viv Drewa – The Owl Lady.
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Pingback: Writing Links 2/13/17 – Where Genres Collide
Very useful post. Thank you.
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Thanks for reading and following, and welcome 🙂
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A pleasure Nicholas.
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Thank you for following too.
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Reblogged this on Author_Iris_Chacon and commented:
Thanks to Nicholas Rossis for this important and extremely helpful information for Amazon authors.
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Wow, what a nightmare. Thanks for giving us some pointers about where we can go and what we can do. 🙂
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I hope you never have to use them 🙂
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Pingback: Friday Roundup – 17th February | Stevie Turner, Indie Author.
I actually got one of these notifications when I published a short story collection of my own work! Several of the stories had, indeed, been previously published online, but Amazon’s robot didn’t realize that they were mine. To Amazon’s credit, however, they didn’t actually remove the book – I just had to go in and recertify that I had the rights. But I could certainly see where you could get in trouble even publishing excerpts from your own work.
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Thanks for sharing that, Lori!
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Good work
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Thanks 🙂
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Outstanding advice for a first time self-publisher…thanks!
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Yay! I’m thrilled you found the post useful. Thanks and welcome 🙂
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