i read their TOS,at http://www.ezinearticles.com/terms-of-service.html,i found this "Agree to limit the number of articles reprinted to no greater than taking 25 articles from our site per calendar year per unique domain that you own.",how about it,how can i do? if i need to use their articles more than 25
i like their site,because they update quickly,could you give me an advice on how to against their TOS
The only way not to go against their TOS is to follow the rules there. If they say 25 per domain per year, they're not likely going to make an exception. If you intend to use a lot, you should look at others with no limitations. I dont' use those sites personally though, but I'm sure plenty of people here could recommend good ones to you. Jenn
Just hit MSN (because they index faster than google) and type in the article title in quotes. You'll probably find it at other places. Most people with more than 5 minutes experience in content marketing submit to more than one place. I almost hate to say this, but they would have a tough time enforcing that rule. For instance, I have many articles there from myself, friends and clients. I don't care if you use 100 of them on a domain. The submission site has no legal ownership and can't enforce copyright ownership limitations--like usage--on their own. Another example would be you using 26 articles from 26 different authors, including myself. Would I want to enforce that rule, be number 26 and get my links dropped? No. Try the SE method first though. Perhaps you could contact EzineArticles and ask them about it. Maybe they don't want their link on your website more than 25 times. Who knows.
my best guess as to why they'd try to set up such a rule is probably to deter people from just copying every article on their site to create another article site. Although you're right... there's probably no grounds for them to enforce that policy. Jenn
Yea Jenn. I wasn't really thinking about that. Although, if someone copied the exact layout, they would have grounds for a legal case since compilations are protected via copyright. Of course, we could go on and on. Contacting the source is the best policy.
"Contacting the source is the best policy", yes ,i agree with you ,and i do not like those free articles,but write them myself is worse than to do so,it will take me a long time to write an article.So i decide to go to other sites,i found a list of article sites here http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=123316&highlight=article+directories Tahnks for your replies!