Our AI Agents Directory had its entire website cloned at another domain. The cloner copied design and content with minor tweaks.
I reached out to them, but they plan do nothing with it.
I’ve noticed this is happening to other indie makers too—people are seeing their hard work copied and claimed by others with little effort. It seems like this issue is growing, especially with the rise of AI.
As indie creators, we put a lot of time and effort into creating unique content. But how do we protect our work from being copied? What can we do to ensure our original work isn’t taken and used by others?
Thanks for all your advice!
With the new rush of LLMs being everywhere, copying and pasting will be common practice.
Trying to protect something that is unprotected like open information while benefitting from this exact transaction is a great irony.
It's just a bad business idea. If OP wants to make a directory it would make much more sense to open-source it and accept it will be continuously churned by AI
For example if it's Namecheap their details to complain are here - https://www.namecheap.com/support/knowledgebase/article.aspx...
GoDaddy here - https://supportcenter.godaddy.com/ipclaims/copyright/infring...
They should take it down pretty quickly if it's a direct copy!
[1] https://obfuscator.io/
Googling the concept of your website, I see dozens of options and they all look similar. It’s a relatively simple site concept.
I would suggest putting more effort into coming up with a more original idea. It will be harder to copy when your site has functionality that isn’t just “here is a list of AI agents.”
> But how do we protect our work from being copied? What can we do to ensure our original work isn’t taken and used by others?
Simply put; you keep it to yourself, and never share it with another living soul. Further reading: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons
Server-side rendering and mandatory logins can go a long way toward making it painful for others to slurp up your IP.
If you build your products the way all the cool kids have been the last ~half decade (i.e., shipping the entire product & business logic to the client), then you may find this kind of frustration inevitable.
Hey, that's what I do. Also cuts down maintenance, complaints, cost, judgementalism, you name it.