Add links when people cut and paste your content with Tynt

by Patrick Altoft on / 65 responses

I’ve just discovered an amazing service called Tynt being used on the Daily Mail website and can’t understand how I missed it before. What Tynt does is use a neat piece of JavaScript to add a link to any content that is cut & pasted from your website.

We’ve been using JavaScript to add links to images for years now (best script available here) but this is the first system I’ve seen that adds the attribution when text is copied.

If you want to test it just copy some text from this post into WordPress or another blog editor and see the link at the end.

The service also reports on content and links being copied from your site in real time – apparently there are news sites using this script to generate 1000 new links every single day.

tynt-links

Tynt Insight monitors copy and paste behavior on billions of page loads per month across hundreds of thousands of web sites . Our data shows that up to 6% of page loads results in a user copying content! On a site that has 20 million page views per month – content leaves that site about a million times each month. Currently, web site owners are not receiving any benefit from this normal user behavior, but Tynt Insight changes all that.

Tynt Insight can drive up to 40% more visits to any individual web page via our automatic attribution link.

Each time a user pastes content from your website into an email, blog or website, we automatically add a URL link back to your site’s original content. When someone clicks that URL, they are directed back to your site and see the original content with the copied portion highlighted. This drives incremental traffic to your site when your content is shared without your knowledge while maintaining a consistent user experience.

As well as increasing the traffic across all pages, Tynt Insight generates higher traffic to niche content, which may be missed otherwise. Pages can see lifts of up to 40% in page views from Tynt Insight.
Read more: Tynt Insight » Get More Visits

tynt

Patrick Altoft is Director of Search at Branded3, a Leeds SEO & Digital Agency specialising in SEO, Web Design, Development & Social Media.

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Comments

Read the 56 comments below, or add your own!

November 23, 2009 at 10:58am

This looks great! But can users remove/edit the links if they know what they are looking for? That would decrease the usefulness of the service… looks great though!

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November 23, 2009 at 11:46am

Luci yes of course users can remove the link – you can’t expect to force people to add the link on their own blog.

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November 23, 2009 at 11:21am

I interviewed the guy from Tynt a while back and asked him a few questions. You can see / watch it here.

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November 23, 2009 at 11:33am

Great information. Its really amazing services..

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November 23, 2009 at 12:42pm

Thanks for the post and for sharing the very nice site that helps to add your link.

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November 23, 2009 at 2:37pm

It’s a unique idea, but it’s not going to help much. People who copy your content aren’t going to leave an attribution link in. Also, most of the copying that takes place is done by scraper bots rather than people copying and pasting, in which case, this wouldn’t do anything at all.

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November 23, 2009 at 2:46pm

Jeremy how do you explain the news sites that are getting thousands of new links from it? As a free service I would be delighted to get a handful of links a month from it I’m not expecting a miracle.

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Rick
November 23, 2009 at 3:08pm

Im not liking how tweets are showing up in the comments box.
Most of them are not comments at all and are just re tweets.
its putting me off reading the conversation through out the comments.

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November 23, 2009 at 3:21pm

Patrick,

Some sites may get some links from it, but as I mentioned, most of the copying that takes place is from bots, not people, so this wouldn’t have any effect what so ever.

That being said, it can’t hurt since it’s a free service, but I wouldn’t expect much from it.

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November 23, 2009 at 3:25pm

Now this could be a nice trick. A lot of blog owners don’t really understand html or java.

The odd’s of a link staying in de blog of the “copy past blogger” are pretty good.

I guess a lot of these blogger really don’t mind is there is a link too the original post or article.

Look!… I don`t mind > Hypotheek adviseur

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November 23, 2009 at 3:55pm

That is a nice little service especially if you spend a great deal of time writing your content and you don’t want it to end up one someones elses website.

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November 23, 2009 at 3:55pm

Awesome tool, thanks for the update.

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November 23, 2009 at 4:18pm

Thanks for the information, I just love to share too but I hate to see people who don’t gave a credit. Will try tynt and see the report.

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November 23, 2009 at 4:35pm

Thanks Patrick for the coverage. Wanted to add a couple of interesting points:

- As you point out – we don’t force people to keep the link, but we are focused primarily on what we call the ‘casual infringer’, not the true content thief. The casual infringer is a fan and likes to spread your content but may not be aware of the correct protocol of always linking back, or may spread your content in an email. For the content thieves, they will always find a way to steal your content if they want it.

- We actually find that most people leave the links in place. We are currently helping over 180,000 sites on the web and tracking hundreds of millions of copy actions every month on the 6.5 billion page loads we watch.

- With the patterns we are seeing in the copy behavior, we have started creating a new and very exciting product to capitalize on an opportunity which is very unique. Watch for this in Q1!

If anyone has any questions, please feel free to reach out to us at feedback[at]tynt [dot] com .

Cheers!

Derek

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Mimi
November 23, 2009 at 6:29pm

I used it some time ago, and it worked well. But, I also noted that my Adsense earnings (mostly clicks) from that site dropped. I’m not sure if it was because Tynt or not, but I had to remove it :(
Maybe now it’s different.

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Jeremy
November 23, 2009 at 7:19pm

If you want to test it just copy some text from this post into WordPress or another blog editor and see the link at the end.

Source: Add links when people cut and paste your content with Tynt

Doesn’t seem to work in Chrome

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November 23, 2009 at 7:31pm

@mimi – we did extensive testing with AdWords and were not able to find any correlation with AdWords revenue and Tynt. If you are able to contact our Product Manager at support [at] tynt dot com it would be very valuable to understand what your specific experience was. Thanks!

Derek

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November 23, 2009 at 7:36pm

@jeremy – it does work in Chrome for me (using Chrome right now). We test for the major browsers (IE, FireFox, Safari) and are adding Chrome into the set, but as far as we know it does work in Chrome. This is the browser I use every day.

What is probably happening for you is that you are seeing instead of the URL something like this:
“If you want to test it just copy some text from this post into WordPress or another blog editor and see the link at the end.

Source: Add links when people cut and paste your content with Tynt ”

The ‘Source: Add links…’ at the end is inserted by Tynt. Patrick has it set on this blog to send a hyperlinked article title instead of the URL – which when you paste into this blogs comment system removes the hyperlink. If you pasted into Gmail you will see the link.

BTW, we are recommending that you always include the URL (a setting in Tynt) to make sure you get link credit when people paste into this type of system.

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November 23, 2009 at 9:43pm

What is probably happening for you is that you are seeing instead of the URL something like this:

Source: Add links when people cut and paste your content with Tynt

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November 24, 2009 at 12:11am

I agree with Rick…

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November 24, 2009 at 9:33am

Nice tool! I knew about http://www.latentmotion.com/the-best-link-bait-citation-plugin/, which is a WP plugin or jQuery script, but this one’s even better with the admin panel behind it.

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Andy
November 24, 2009 at 10:47am

We tried it for a while but ended up pulling it – for complicated reasons we often need to copy segments of our own content and paste it into input fields and it got just too irritating removing the link each time. We did find that people often left the link in, though – particularly when reposting to forums.

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November 24, 2009 at 5:22pm

@andy We’ve added a new feature for people like you who are doing a lot of copying/pasting into your own site or CMS. If you go to the admin dashboard you will see an option on the Settings tab that will cookie your browser and put Tynt to sleep whenever that browser accesses your site, thus avoiding the problem you mention!

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November 25, 2009 at 9:36am

@Tynt,..

This works perfect in Mozilla firefox too!

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November 25, 2009 at 5:59pm

It seems like a good idea, but I wonder how many people would remove the link once they saw it copied over?

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November 26, 2009 at 7:17am

If its working in all browsers properly, and tracks text, images, flash and other stuff also, then its a great website helping us to save our own things or if it been copied also, we will get free backlink. amazing man, i like to try it soon.

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November 26, 2009 at 1:08pm

Great info.

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November 26, 2009 at 6:45pm

Superb idea, especially for content rich websites.

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November 26, 2009 at 8:47pm

Very interesting and well worth a look.

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November 27, 2009 at 12:18am

I think Tynt could be a great idea and could definitely help webmasters to create more one-way backlinks to their content or website but on the other hand, if someone is cutting and pasting your content and links into bad neighbourhoods or websites, is it going to have a bad effect on your ranking and seo? If so, is there a way you can monitor or even stop this from happening?

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November 27, 2009 at 10:31am

Really good stuff, already added it to one of my websites and waiting to see if the reporting is as good. But definitely something really handy for SEO reporting I must say!!

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November 27, 2009 at 10:39am

A slight problem, when I try to sign up for my domain.co.uk doman I am told that it is an invalid domain (should look like domain.com).

Does this not work for uk domains then ?

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November 27, 2009 at 3:41pm

@Ask4LifeSkills – In the Tynt dashboard, you get a report showing where all of your links have been pasted, and you can follow them back to the location so you can determine if you want to take action regarding whoever has linked to your site. If you feel it is a link you would rather not have, that discussion is up to you. :)

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November 27, 2009 at 6:28pm

Lassan 2010-et írunk, már meg is jelentek a 2010-es menyaszonnyi ruha modellek

Read more: http://httpeskuvo.blog.hu/#ixzz0Y58ekbsB

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November 27, 2009 at 6:30pm

Mondhatjuk, hogy nem a ruha teszi az embert, de nem hiszem, hogy bármelyik menyasszony ezt a mondást tartaná szem előtt, az esküvőjére készülődve.

Read more: http://httpeskuvo.blog.hu/#ixzz0Y59BXXXg

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November 27, 2009 at 8:46pm

A házasság ősidők óta két ember egymás iránt érzett szeretetének legszebb kifejezője, melynek jelképe a karikagyűrű. Jelképezi két ember egész életre szóló összefonódását. Szimbolizálja a szerelmet, a hűséget és a soha véget nem érő összetartozást. A házasság és a család jelentik társadalmunk alappilléreit.

Read more: http://httpeskuvo.blog.hu/2009/08/09/gyuru_10#ixzz0Y5gxvX2c

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November 28, 2009 at 11:40pm

@JohnMichell – Tynt works for all domain names globally (even those in completely foreign languages). If you are getting that message, it might be because you included the http:// at the front. Drop that. If you still have problems, please send the actual domain through to support at tynt dot com and we can look into it. Someone may have tried to register your domain and if it was bogus the domain is now frozen and we will have to unlock it.

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Wow I’ve never heard of Tynt before either, it’s pretty awesome. I find it amazing how much stuff is out there to be discovered, it seems like “literally” I learn something new every day.

Thanks for the post.

Miles Hennis

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December 1, 2009 at 10:56am

Thanks for sharing great information.

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December 3, 2009 at 3:36pm

I notice that site using this script, text can’t be selected as usual only if you double click to get the selection.

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December 3, 2009 at 4:16pm

@gofree – Your statement doesn’t sound correct. You can select any text on a Tynt enabled site. Try http://www.time.com for example. If you are having a problem on a specific site, please let us know at support at tynt dt com so we can check it out. It might be an unrelated issue.

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ahduth
December 9, 2009 at 7:50pm

Hello, I’ve visited a couple of websites now that insert these unwanted links into my copy and pastes. When it happened a couple months ago, that particular website’s content was in decline anyhow, so it wasn’t much missed. But now more important providers (like the Daily Mail as you point out) have started using it.

Much of the discussion I have with my colleagues happens over instant messaging (we all work remotely), and this new “feature” is incredibly invasive, especially considering we usually send the link up front before we start quoting (so we’re all discussing the same thing). How do you turn it off?

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December 16, 2009 at 8:58am

thanks for sharing this great information

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January 24, 2010 at 9:33am

Awesome service for content rich websites like article directories. Imagine the benefit that ezinearticles would gain if they implemented this.

This is just a guesstimate, but I would think at least 80 – 90% of their published articles that have been duplicated and republished, loose their link sources.

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Chad
January 29, 2010 at 1:24am

The idea is great, and I use Tynt… I manage a large site and the Tynt dashboard informs me that its generated thousands of links back to my content… This is great, but when I investigate those links, a great majority of them are coming from forum posts–that is, message board users seem to love to quote my content and obviously I’m now getting all of those links.

My concern is that wouldn’t Google think I suddenly started spamming all these forums when thousands of link-drops start showing up leading back to my site?

Please advise :?: :?: :?:

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February 4, 2010 at 9:18pm

This is just so awesome!

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April 19, 2010 at 9:34am

wow this looks amazing, I am going to give it a try. Thanks

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April 24, 2010 at 10:59am

This looks great, plagiarism is a serious problem for me, and it has a serious effect on google rankings when someone scrapes your content, the links that this script add also have another advantage as when google sees two websites with identical content and realises that one links to the other, it automatically realises that the content really belongs to the site that is being linked to and correctly attributes credit. This is possibly even more valuable to alot of sites than the free links themselves.

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April 29, 2010 at 11:03am

This is definetely worth checking out.
Cheers

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May 13, 2010 at 8:29am

Hello Guys. I read this article but i can’t understand what they said.Any one explain me how it’s working?

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May 13, 2010 at 8:31am

This website is good but as compare to Google Analytical is low.This is definitely worth checking out.
Cheers

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August 17, 2010 at 11:51am

Thanks for always being the source that explains things instead of just putting an unjustified answer out there. I loved this post.

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November 8, 2010 at 3:05pm

Awesome info. Thanks. Had no idea about this. Will be looking into it now.

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April 19, 2011 at 2:53pm

thank for the info, I never have read like this point of view.

best regards

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August 16, 2011 at 7:32pm

Great posting. I’m sure to use this methode in my link building project. Thanks.

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September 16, 2011 at 9:48am

Wow its amazing news for me now links should be paste trough Tynt great.

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