How can I make sure I'm not buying stolen PLR?

6 replies
I was looking for some PLR articles so I'm searching Google and I come across a perfect PLR pack of 25 articles in the niche I'm working on.

I noticed two different sites so I check them out and they list the articles by titles and they're the same exact titles. One is selling their pack for $7 on Payloadz which makes me wonder. The other site is selling them for $1.99 which also makes me wonder.

So how can I figure out where I can legitimately buy this PLR article pack? I'm asking the folks selling themselves but how do I know who is who? I don't why buy stolen stuff. Maybe they both had resale rights to sell these PLR articles. Am I over thinking this?
#buying #make #plr #stolen
  • Profile picture of the author Bev Clement
    Alan a lot of the PLR which is seen on many sites are bought from PLR Wholesalers and comes with unrestricted rights.

    The best way to buy PLR is directly from the original owner, that way you know what the rights are.

    If I see something with unrestricted rights, I know it will be for sale for $0.99 or less at some stage.
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    • Profile picture of the author Mark Singletary
      Many of the ebooks/reports that are sold/given away with "full PLR rights" don't have PLR rights at all except for the original buyer.

      For example many places have Nicheology products for sale with "full PLR" but the license makes it clear that they can't do that. Warriors have provided them as WSOs even.

      There is a lot of "mislicensed" PLR being offered. Like Bev said the best bet is to buy from the source.

      Mark
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      • Profile picture of the author Bai_Mike
        One of the good ways that I do to check is to use copyscape. Posting a post at blogger.com then running copyscape on it will check if there's any duplicate on it.
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  • Profile picture of the author gailwarren
    i recommend copyscape. Go to it and check it out. when using it, it will tell you if its a duplicate.

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  • Profile picture of the author Ross Dalangin
    Hi Alan,

    I always check the WSO section because there's a rule that the WSO must be their own product or created specifically for them.

    Regards,

    Ross
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  • Profile picture of the author Bev Clement
    Using copyscape is a bad idea, because if it is PLR then you will find duplicate content especially if people haven't changed it.

    I have bought PLR which has come from wholesalers because I want to use it as the basis for something else.

    Even in the WSO area, some people are not selling content they have written, sometimes you will find someone selling content they have bought elsewhere.

    Mark is right in what he says. I'm part of a membership site, and I have downloaded material which is relevant to a project I'm working on. Inside is a file which says "Source code do not pass on." If that is the case then I read the rights, and see if I can use it for myself. Too many people are lazy and don't read the rights, they just put up the content in the hope to make money.
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