Daring Fireball rip-off ripped off

logo-daringfireballSpeaking of bloggers, plagiarism and content theft, earlier today high profile Mac blogger John Gruber posted news of a site that had completely ripped off Daring Fireball’s CSS and design.

The site looked like this:

gruber_ripoff
Click image for a full-sized view

The only changes, John noted, were the removal of his name and copyright statement from the code.

By tonight the look of the site had changed . How the change happened I do not know, whether by natural contrition or some form of self-regulation among the blogging community.

In his apology the blogger said that “the site was meant to be a sandbox (test) site and was not supposed to [be] public-facing.”

He continues: “My apologies mostly to John – for not asking permission to tinker with his code and also to his readers – for any confusion.”

Daring Fireball is a very fine source of Mac news and opinion. Its Linked List elevates “human aggregation” to an art form. You can subscribe to the site , not only supporting John’s own writing but keeping alive the greater dream that quality can succeed in the online world.bloggers, content theft, plagiarism, intellectual property, Internet, daring fireball, apple, mac

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6 Responses to “Daring Fireball rip-off ripped off”

  1. eric says:

    so an individual copied another site whose own site is not for profit?

    i really dont care.

    oh i wish my world’s largest problem was bloggers copying each other.

    i remember i nicer internet a long time ago where getting each other’s code was a nice way of learning…sigh

  2. me says:

    There’s a difference between using code for example of technique and ripping off design.

  3. Christiaan says:

    There’s a difference between using code for example of technique and ripping off design.

    Well, yeah, it’s less creative.

    Plagiarism and intellectual loot
    http://last-straw.net/2006/06/plagiarism-and-intellectual-loot/

  4. SpyDone says:

    Great to read this ended well.

    I love Daring Fireball, but it really does need more articles. I was going to buy a membership to support John and his attempt to make a go at this full time.

    But I decided to wait it out and see what was different and better with John working full time on the site before I spent my money on the effort.

    Sadly, I am glad I decided to wait. I love John’s writing, but weeks on end with just links is not worth a membership to me.

    I would love a regular publishing window from Daring Fireball. New articles on Tuesday and Friday, or something of that ilk. The links are nice filler, but they are just that.

    I wish John well and hope Daring Fireball is a huge success, both for John and for the internet. But more articles is really a must.

  5. Chris says:

    I agree with SpyDone. I find Gruber’s writings enjoyable, but his claim that he’s blogging “full time” is puzzling to me. He almost never posts more than two mini-essays per month, and there are days where he adds nothing to his “Linked List.” On average, he only seems to post 10-15 linked list items per week, or about two a day. That’s full-time work? There are definitely bloggers I’d subscribe to, but Gruber isn’t one of them — he doesn’t generate anywhere near enough content. I think it’s great that so many people bought memberships, but IMHO it seems more like a vanity exercise than a content subscription.

  6. Christiaan says:

    There are definitely bloggers I’d subscribe to, but Gruber isn’t one of them — he doesn’t generate anywhere near enough content.

    What does quantity have to do with it? Surely if the price suits the quantity and quality it doesn’t matter what the quantity is?

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