Spun vs translated?

by 6 replies
7
Does Google detect translated articles?
Suppose you scrape some content off a foreign language site on a similar topic.
Then put it in a Google translator...
You know, it gets quite readable today, yet it passes the copy-scape.
Now just submit it somewhere and voila...

Has anyone tried this method, does it work? Or would you rather spin the same articles over and over again?
#search engine optimization #spun #translated
  • If it is translated by Google then obviously they could detect it straightaway by comparing it. Only Google translates so badly.

    If it was translated by me they had no way of detecting it.

    I have already translated articles and the likes for Internet marketers and never got a complaint.

    Cheers
    Dan Hower


    • [1] reply
    • Thanks, I think that makes sense!
      All in all there's no way you can go wrong with a manual translation, however a good translation sometime takes as long as writing a new one. So it's not the best shortcut.
      On the other hand if we pick on some media content, like cooking recipes with pictures, or top 25 healthy fruits or anything of that sort, there ain't much text you would have to translate, and the pictures would pass the copyright check once you simply re-size and save them again.
      The problem though, not all the niches are rich with these pictures, especially when they have to do with science or medicine for example.
      • [1] reply
  • i would stay away from this method as google is very smart and it can detect small pieces of copied item very efficiently

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    Does Google detect translated articles? Suppose you scrape some content off a foreign language site on a similar topic. Then put it in a Google translator...