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eBook Piracy: How to Respond If Someone Steals Your eBook Online

by Nate Hoffelder

After a decade of running The Digital Reader, Nate is a veteran web publisher with experience in design, maintenance, recovery, and troubleshooting. What little he doesn't know, he can learn.

June 29, 2023

Sunday, 16 February 2020, was the day that I became a real author.

I had been a writer for over a decade now, but Sunday was the day that I learned that one of the workbooks I had uploaded to KDP had been pirated and was being sold on a pirate site.

I didn’t really care that it had been pirated; my blog posts had been pirated so many times that I had grown a thick skin. Furthermore, the workbook was a lead magnet I had uploaded not to make money on so much as to learn how KDP worked.

But even though I wasn’t losing money on that workbook, I took the opportunity to file DMCA notices because I saw that as a good opportunity to figure out the most effective way to deal with piracy and then share it with you.

For starters, the first thing you should know is that the primary way you fight piracy is by filing a DMCA takedown notice.

A DMCA notice was originally named for a provision in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act which required tech companies in the USA to remove online content when they were informed that the content infringed on a trademark or copyright.

Since then, it has become a common term on the internet. Most web companies will respond to a DMCA notice, including companies in countries not covered by the DMCA. They do so more because it’s SOP in the industry than because they have a legal obligation to do so. (Depending on where they are based, they might not have any law that requires compliance.)

But where to send the DMCA Notice?

Well, that will depend on where you found the pirated ebook.

You might find the pirated ebook in an ebookstore, or in a cloud storage service, or on a pirate site, and each requires a different approach.

Did you find the pirated ebook in a legitimate ebookstore like Play Books, the Kindle Store, etc.?

If that is the case, then you need to file a takedown notice with the retailer. Here are the relevant pages for the larger ebook retailers.

Be sure to fill out the form for each pirated ebook you find. Be thorough and precise. Many of these companies get millions of notices a day, and if they can deal with your notice by rejecting it because you missed something, they will.

TIP: If you don’t see the name of the company you need to contact, you can find their contact info by googling their name plus “DMCA.” If that doesn’t work, try their name plus “copyright.”

Did you find the pirated ebook on the Internet Archive or The Open Library?

The Internet Archive has posted instructions on filing a DMCA notice at the bottom of this page.

Did you find the pirated ebook on a legit cloud storage service or file-sharing site?

Pirates sometimes use legitimate online services to share stolen ebooks. If you find one or more of your ebooks illegally uploaded to a cloud service, you need to file a DMCA notice with the service that is hosting the file. Here are the submission pages for the leading cloud services:

Again, if you don’t see the name of the company you need to contact, you can find their contact info by googling their name plus “DMCA.” If that doesn’t work, try their name plus “copyright.”

Did you find your ebook pirated on some obscure site?

This is where things get complicated.

My rule of thumb is to only send takedown notices to companies that I can trust will respond. This is why I will send a notice to, say, Google, but not a pirate site like the late eBookBike.

I do not bother sending notices to pirate sites because they rarely respond. In the ten years I was a blogger, I have found they often ignore DMCA notices because they know they can get away with it. A lot of the time they are in a different legal jurisdiction, making it difficult to pursue legal action, and even if you did have the tens of thousands of dollars it would take to sue them, you will be throwing your money away for little benefit. The pirates know this, which is why many pirate sites will simply ignore you.

Also, a lot of pirate sites are only pretending to have your book. This type of site is usually running some kind of con (it varies). Since this type of site doesn’t have your ebook, it’s not worth your time even talking to them.

These reasons are why the first thing you should do is file a DMCA notice with Google. Ask Google to remove from its search results any pages on the faux pirate site that mention your book. This will make it harder for potential pirates to find your pirated ebook via Google.

You can file a DMCA notice with Google on this page.

Once you have done that, you might want to also file a DMCA notice with the company which is hosting the site which pirated your ebook. This might require some investigative work.

How do you send a DMCA notice to a hosting company when you don’t know their name?

The first thing you should do is open a new browser tab, go to www.whois.com/whois/, and enter the pirate site’s domain.

With most sites this will give you a page full of technical and contact info about the site.

The section you need to look for is the “nameservers.” This can contain anywhere between one and 4 entries, and the reason we are looking at it is because the entries will give us a clue about the hosting company.

For example, the site that pirated my ebook uses Cloudflare’s nameservers.

To be clear, this pirate site is not hosted by Cloudflare (it’s just using CF’s services). This detail is not strictly relevant, however; what matters is that I can send a DMCA notice to Cloudflare.

I do not know where to send the notices, exactly, so what I do is Google Cloudflare and DMCA. This often turns up a good result, so you might want to try a similar trick if you are in my position.

This trick does not always work, however. Some hosting companies use obscure names for their nameservers, and when I encounter that I either have to ask for help in a forum for web techs or spend a few minutes looking up obscure technical info.

If you need a place to ask for help, may I suggest one of the WordPress or web developer groups on Facebook. Also, if you ask me, I will be happy to help you figure out the answer (this is fun for me).

But most of the time googling for the hosting company’s DMCA page will give me a link to the page, and what I do next is fill out the form on that page.

Again, be sure to fill out the form for each pirated ebook you find. Be thorough, and precise. Many of these hosting companies get millions of notices a day, and if they can deal with your notice by rejecting it because you missed something, they will. (That is actually what happened with Cloudflare.)

What’s next?

After you have sent the DMCA notices, you’re going to need to follow up. You will need to be persistent in making sure that each notice is complied with, and that each pirated ebook is removed.

About 5 years ago I had a problem with a pirate site scraping my blog and republishing my blog posts. I ended up having to send dozens of DMCA notices, and I had to repeatedly follow up because the hosting company, LeaseWeb, kept falling for the pirate site’s lies when it claimed to have removed the pirated blog posts.

What was particularly frustrating about that incident was that I had to file DMCA notices with three different divisions of the company in three different countries. Then I had to yell at the three different divisions to get them to follow through.

That was frustrating, but I did finally manage to put an end to that particular piracy issue.

Addendum

If this seems like too much work, here’s a list of companies that can fight piracy for you – if you pay them enough. (You might also find a VA who can take care of it for you.)

Hi, I'm Nate.

I build and fix websites for authors, and I am also a tech VA. I can build you a website that looks great and turns visitors into fans, and I can also fix your tech when it breaks. Let me fight with tech support so you don’t have to.

My blog has everything you need to know about websites and online services. Don’t see what you need. or want personalized help? Reach out.

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3 Comments

  1. Sally M. Chetwynd

    Hi, Nate, I’m curious to know how you find out (in the first place) that your book has been stolen. (I suspect your answer may lie in the mysterious (to me, a digital dolt) world of meta data, metrics, and analytics, but perhaps I’m wrong.)

    Reply
    • Nate Hoffelder

      Excellent question!

      There used to be a service that would have their bots look for your books online, but it shut down. Now your best option would be to set up search alerts either with Google or Talkwalker.
      https://www.talkwalker.com/alerts
      https://www.google.com/alerts

      Have them search for your name, pen name, and book titles. They will send you email notifications of they find mentions of you online (they’ll also find book reviews and other things besides possible piracy).

      Reply
  2. David Kudler

    Nate, thanks so much for the thorough rundown, excellent as always!

    As you say, in almost every case where I’ve found one of my books offered for download without my permission, it’s been a scam, not a “legit” pirate site. And on the few occasions where my book was actually pirated (or shared peer-to-peer), the sites were hosted in countries that aren’t signatories of the Berne convention (ie, Russia, China, Iran, etc), so DMCA notices didn’t have much effect. Still, sending them is a good idea, since IP needs to be protected in order to be maintained.

    I haven’t found a case of real piracy — someone publishing and selling my work on retail sites, but when I do, I’ll keep your links close at hand.

    Thanks again!

    Reply

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