Tag Archive: amazon

Amazon’s Kindle Lets Anyone Sell Your Content

Amazon has opened up its Kindle to blogs but it comes with a major security hole that makes it possible for anyone to sell any blog, including your own.

3 Count: Kindle Bricks

This is daily column on Plagiarism Today where the site brings you three of the days biggest, most important copyright and plagiarism news links. If you want to offer your feedback on the column, use the contact form or just follow me on Twitter at @plagiarismtoday. 1: Wikipedia community vote on migration to CC BY-SA…

3 Count: Roll D6 for Litigation

This is daily column on Plagiarism Today where the site brings you three of the days biggest, most important copyright and plagiarism news links. If you want to offer your feedback on the column, use the contact form or just follow me on Twitter at @plagiarismtoday. 1: Wizards Pulls PDFs, Sues Eight for Copyright Infringement…

3 Count: Song of the Count

This is daily column on Plagiarism Today where the site brings you three of the days biggest, most important copyright and plagiarism news links. If you want to offer your feedback on the column, use the contact form or just follow me on Twitter at @plagiarismtoday. 1: Redundant staff blow whistle on bosses for pirate…

3 Count: Turnabout

This is daily column on Plagiarism Today where the site brings you three of the days biggest, most important copyright and plagiarism news links. If you want to offer your feedback on the column, use the contact form or just follow me on Twitter at @plagiarismtoday. 1: Shahanda Moursy sues the RIAA First off today,…

3 Count: Copyright Kindling

This is the first in a new daily column on Plagiarism Today where the site brings you three of the days biggest, most important copyright and plagiarism news links. If you want to offer your feedback on the column, use the contact form above or just follow me on Twitter at @plagiarismtoday. 1: New Kindle…

The Rise of Made-For-Amazon Spam

As spam techniques evolve, it is inevitable that they begin to turn to newer and more reliable services to publish and profit from their junk content. In just such a push, many spammers are turning to Amazon as a means to make a quick, reliable dollar.