This tweet by Jeff was posted in chat:

for those of you seeing scrapers rank above #stackoverflow can you reply with your exact google query terms? (plain text only, no urls)
Tweeted by codinghorror on December 9, 2010 at 7:59 AM

Since some of us don't use Twitter, I thought it'd be helpful to open up an MSO post for these reports.

Just a friendly suggestion, those of you who don't usually sort answers by "active" might want to do so while you're on this post.

Jeff cleared out obsolete reports in April 2012 because Google adjusted its index in the first quarter of 2011. Feel free to re-report anything that ranks highly in 2012.

This post is for reporting sites that outrank Stack Exchange in search results. You may also be looking for the post for reporting sites that use SE content illegally (i.e. without following attribution guidelines).

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What about results varying from country to country? Some copycat sites seem to get ranked higher than SO in the U.S. only – Pekka Dec 10 '10 at 22:56
Perhaps I should learn to stop using stackoverflow in my programming queries? – Ivo Flipse Dec 11 '10 at 7:52
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Shouldn't we report at google.com/webmasters/tools/spamreport instead? Even when NOT violation Google's rules, reports might convince Google that their users are not happy with these search results? – Arjan Dec 11 '10 at 18:02
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Who is to say Stack Overflow should always rank higher. They are allowing the content as CC-Wiki and if another site provides the content in a better way, what's the fuss? – theJerm Dec 15 '10 at 4:18
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I guess this is to understand why SO is ranking below the scrapers. I hope it's not to demean the "scrapers" themselves. Because if the scrapers are attributing and following the license, they are doing no wrong. I hope Jeff meant to ask, "Send me the links of those ranking higher. I want to see what they are doing right." – abel Jan 7 '11 at 22:14
@Arjan To give a bad analogy,that is like giving away free Yellow T shirts and then asking people to throw water balloons on those wearing yellow T shirts. Google automatically discredits duplicate content and SO requires attribution so that generally means incoming links from the scraper. So SO should rank higher more often than not. – abel Jan 7 '11 at 22:17
Is Cutts talking about this issue here? – hyperslug Jan 28 '11 at 17:50
Confound sites like efreedom. If they're evil, that's reason enough to not like them. If they're not, I can't get a slice o' that. Either way it's a losing proposition. – MrBoJangles Dec 6 '11 at 23:57
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13 Answers

readmespot.com They seem to abide by the license: they link back to the question and to each post author, they have a footer indicating that the content is aggregated from SO/SU/SF and under CC-wiki.

Found by searching "securing file system for secure sftp server". The copy of the question on readmespot is returned first, then the other results on that site, then results on SF with 1: a question that links to it, 2: a tag page, 3: the question with this title.

www.google.com/search?q=%22securing+file+system+for+secure+sftp+server%22

Next down is a license violator. Nice to see that at least the legal content scraper did better than the illegal and visually aggressive one.

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no readmespot showing up now, but I do see some *.info which is never good. – Jeff Atwood Apr 17 at 22:09
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http://www.x2x1.com/faq/

This site is a blatant rip-off. Even their layout is similar. Most (if not all) questions are ripped verbatim from Stack Overflow. I Googled the text from one question, and Stack Overflow was the first result; this site was third and fourth.

Google this: TypeError: unbound method can_move() must be called with O_shape.

Original question: Drawing Blocks Tetris at http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8995690/drawing-blocks-tetris

Knockoff URL: http://www.x2x1.com/show/8995690.aspx (even the question ID is the same facepalm)

enter image description here

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No attribution and they're spamming all kinds of social bookmark links and hiding accepted answers behind a membership wall... that's definitely infringing on the CC-wiki license. – Aarobot Jan 31 at 3:54
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There is absolutely nothing on that site but illegal content >:( – George Edison Jan 31 at 6:29
The site seems to be owned by some dude in China. whois.net/whois/x2x1.com – Rocket Jan 31 at 14:35
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You can try emailing Abuse@hichina.com, this seems to be where he bought the domain from. – Rocket Jan 31 at 14:42
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Site stealing SE posts without attribution:

http://vniup.com/index.php/linux-unix/unable-to-access-linuxskbuff-h.html

Here is the question (and answers) they stole:

Unable to access linux/skbuff.h

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http://codeblow.com/ is stealing SO content without attributing.

I searched Google for "Apache Filesmatch" and got http://codeblow.com/questions/apache-filesmatch/, which is a copy of the SO question Apache FilesMatch.

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I just ran a Google search and did not see any codeblow.com results. (I did see a bigresource.com result, though.) – Popular Demand May 7 at 20:40
@PopularDemand Must be a search bubble or whatever it is called. – Anish Gupta May 7 at 20:42
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A few days ago, I posted this question on Gaming. Having not received a correct answer, I decided to do some Google searching, and stumbled upon http://b.vniup.com/index.php/gamer/can-i-play-seiklus-in-windowed-mode.html. It would seem they stole my question, as well as the answers. I've looked, but I can't find an attribution anywhere on their page.

Also, in case it's important, it was the fifth result in the Google search.

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I'm always astounded how ugly the copycat sites always are. – Ben Brocka Feb 3 at 15:38
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I like how the largest tag in that site's tag cloud is "Possible Duplicate." – Dave McClelland Feb 14 at 14:01
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I wanted to find this question and Googled for "tortoisesvn sharptooth". I got a bunch of other result, and the 8th result was on QuestionHub.com: http://www.questionhub.com/StackOverflow/1847645, which is a scraped version of the question I tried to find, but there wasn't the original question anywhere on the first page of the resultset.

Also I wanted to find this question and Googled for "debug heap" sharptooth attach - there're no results on stackoverflow.com in the output, but there's a link to this thing http://tech-question.com/visual-c-difference-between-start-with-without-debugging-in-release-mode-355427 (that btw looks like violating the license...).

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no repro at all now – Jeff Atwood Apr 17 at 22:06
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Here is another one: http://www.qandasystem.info/

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Just to report that we have a few questions from security SE appearing on this site. EG: qandasystem.info/security/… – Rory Alsop Feb 4 at 12:00
Is there a specific scraped qandasystem.info post that's ranking higher in Google than its SE counterpart? – Popular Demand Apr 18 at 22:50
@Popular, there was but I don't remember, it has been quite a while since I have posted this. – Kaveh Apr 21 at 19:31
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Search text in Google:

jquery ui accordion copy item shows multiple active Animate Items Added / Removed To Accordion

and

"jquery ui accordion copy item shows multiple active"

Scraper site above Stack Overflow:

http://javascript.bigresource.com/jQuery-Animate-items-added-removed-to-Accordion-JdbyerR80.html

Stack Overflow question:

Animate items added/removed to a jQuery Accordion

Do not see attribution/link to SO question in the scraper site.

Did not see the SO question in the first eight pages of Google results.

I forgot, in my haste, to ignore this other site in the search results — as I most often do — as they have horrid performance and often/most of the time clicking on the "replies" to the questions on their site gives you not found bombs due to their horrid performance... and I really see no value in their site.

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No links back or attribution whatsoever:

Main site: http://downloadeeebooks.blogspot.ca/

Specific instance: http://downloadeeebooks.blogspot.ca/2012/05/modify-presentation-of-element-in.html

Original SO question: Modify presentation of element in a TabularInline

screenshot of google search

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This blog post incorporates one of my SO answers, copied in full, with no link, attribution, mention of me or of StackOverflow:

http://www.dkphp.com/questions-2/pros-and-cons-of-using-a-cursor-in-sql-server.html

If you wait for the annoying "like" dialog to access this "premium" stolen content, you'll find that the portion of the post directly below "The Answer" is a direct copy - links and all - of my answer here:

Pros and cons of using a cursor (in SQL server)

This was not scraped or automated, or pulled via API - this was very clearly done by hand, incorporated into the user's own blog post as if it were part of his own work.

I did not find this blog post through Google, but it was just posted today (I discovered it via trackback). So it doesn't appear above StackOverflow for relevant search terms today, but it still seems to violate the terms of use.

(I brought this up as a new question here: Answers lifted and published elsewhere)

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gamingqna.blogspot.com is in partial violation of our cc-by-sa license. Most pages do have author links, http://gamingqna.blogspot.it/2011/07/where-does-audiosurf-put-corkscrews.html e.g. doesn't.

Could they possibly be doing this by hand? The mind boggles.

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http://cookingqna.blogspot.de/

No attribution at all. Also no indication who the responsible person for the site is, which is a violation of German law (and the site gets served to me from a German domain—yes I know that this is just Blogspot changing the domain, but maybe this is a legal way to show teeth to them).

Thank you David Wallace for noticing it.

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I actually do see very discreet attribution pointing back to the author profiles on SE, and at the bottom of each post is a "more discussion" link that directs you back to the original question on Seasoned Advice. So on first glance, it looks like they actually are following our attribution laws, but definitely in a kind of shady way. Someone here at Stack HQ will look into this further, though. – Laura 21 hours ago
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I have been following this whole development and it looks like you are at war with sites that use your own API. It's inevitable that if another site uses your API and has the same content of their site as a result, then they will also be found in search results. The api based site ranking higher that original probabaly happends less than 1/10 of 1% of all your questions. As long as these sites also link back to you and the link does not have a nofollow, then you are even getting an extra boost in page rank, no matter how tiny that boost may be, it's still good for you.

I think if someone complies with the attribution requirements and links back to original, you should not treat those sites like some sort of criminals. After all, the 'mashups' is the new buzz word on the web. That's when someone can use several APIs to get some content from here, some from there and create their own website. As long as all terms of service requirements are met, then you should be happy about it, even if occasionally they rank higher, it's still good for you.

Many sites also use Yahoo Answers API to repost their content. Yahoo answers dont even have a link back requirement and they are not crying about other sites using their API.

You (SO) are probably the only site I know that offers the API and then go on a witch hunt against those who uses it, even those who uses it properly.

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Those sites don't use the Stack Exchange API but use the data dumps or scrape the content. – systempuntoout Jan 9 '11 at 14:58
How can you tell? – user155464 Jan 9 '11 at 15:07
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because you would need a registered Api key in order to use the Api and the SO Staff checks who is going to use that key and for what; for the record, I have not downvoted your answer. – systempuntoout Jan 9 '11 at 15:21
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@systempuntoout still, I don't think they're doing anything illegal. They're a bunch of scum spammers, but using the data dumps is not against SO policy. – alex Jan 26 '11 at 8:15
@alex I'm aware that it's not illegal, I'm just saying that they are not using the API. – systempuntoout Jan 26 '11 at 8:32
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Why exactly should 'they' (or we) be happy? The fact that what you're doing is legal doesn't mean we should like you or respect you. Nobody likes screenscrappers because when they succeed, search quality drops. – Nikita Rybak Feb 9 '11 at 11:16
The problem is that most of them don't link back. – Brad Gilbert Feb 3 at 20:59
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