1 week live, 1 sale and already COURSE STOLEN AND PIRATED! Really!

Hi

I launched my course a week ago, got one sale, and a couple of days later, already found my course content stolen and uploaded to a pirate site. It's behind a "premium" paywall so has to pay a monthly access to get to download the file (along with the usual viruses).

I can see exactly how it happened. There was a "student" who obviously created an account has they used the new learner coupon code, bought both my courses, on the 12th Nov and shortly refunded them. On the 13th both courses appeared on the page 1 on google on the pirate site.

Having just started and made one sale for a grand total of $2, it's a bit disappointed how easily content can get stolen and someone else benefits, not the creator and all my hard work. It's a 12 hour course so maybe that's why it got stolen?

My feeling as the course appeared on the "new" course feed which is being prowled by pirates. Therefore I am thinking a strategy to deal with this scenario in future, is to upload only 20-25% of my intended course content and then make the course live. After the pirates have had their fill when the course is new, a few weeks later, upload the remaining 75% content. In this way, the pirated course could only contain a minimum number of content rather than the full content, and the pirates have moved on.

The other strategy is to embed electronic signature in each video via stenography, though not sure it's worth it.

I guess I could take a compliment that the pirates thought the course was valuable enough to bother stealing.. if the course was shorter, maybe they wouldn't bother (hence strategy above to go live with minimal "poor" content).

Any ideas how to deal with this piracy threat as it's almost killed my hopes for success in just a week on being on Udemy.

Thanks

Comments

  • SAPBuddy
    SAPBuddy Posts: 207 specialist rank

    @TimMacLachlan
    This is a problem of any online platform. Making live the course without 100% may have some impact in genius students. It seen my course are getting uploaded in YouTube . For myself I can’t stop such this, take it part of risk in the online world and move on.

  • Thor
    Thor Posts: 2,321 rolemodel rank

    Isn't online wonderful?

    Having been on Udemy close to 5 years, it is just something you accept, it happens.

    95% of pirates would never be your students on Udemy, it will have very little impact on your earnings here.

    Pirates come back, making a limited content seems like a bad idea for the actual students.

    If Hollywood with billions in earnings could not make a dent in piracy, then who are you and I?

    Report it here: https://support.udemy.com/hc/en-us/articles/229604108-What-Should-I-do-if-I-Find-a-Course-on-a-Pirate-Site-

    /shrug, move on, focus on the things you can control (make better courses).

  • It's a pity to hear something like that, but you don't have to make it too easy for such pirates. I, therefore, do not make the lessons in my courses available for download. If something can be downloaded, it is mostly PDF files that summarize or instruct the respective topic. Of course not a substitute for the video lesson but a good help for students who want to apply knowledge even if there is no internet connection.

    Best

    Martin Sutter

  • Hi Martin

    Thanks for your reply - strange this is I haven't made any of my videos downloadable! I made sure of that, so I think they used some sort of screen grabbing software. The other thing I don't understand is how they managed to get a refund. It's my understanding is that after watching a certain % of the course, then it's not possible to get a refund.. ie if a student watches 100% within 30 days can get still ask for a refund?

  • Thor
    Thor Posts: 2,321 rolemodel rank

    ANYTHING can be downloaded with simple scripts, since it takes some skill most people can't, you making your videos downloadable or not has no impact on that.

    For the refund that should be true, I don't know what the percentage watched for no refund, but it is supposedly there.

    So no, they should not be able to.

  • @TimMacLachlan
    we are similar to the movie business... Piracy will happen... We can either continue to create new courses and make more money.. or focus on getting our courses off the piracy websites... I prefer the first option better

  • just yesterday 1 of my students watched 100% course then he got refund . Really frustrating

  • I just had the same thing happen. Uploaded several courses very recently. Had a student enroll in two of those courses, then suddenly disappear from enrollment. No sale made. Today I found both courses on a piracy website. I'm currently dealing with that. In the meantime I have unpublished all of my courses. I will most likely remove them all from Udemy, and just continue to sell on my own platform as I have been. I am appalled at how quickly and easily someone was able to steal courses that were not downloadable.

  • Thank you for this helpful response, Tim. It's so frustrating, isn't it? I've contacted the website host re: removal, contacted Udemy. I'll need to republish the courses to report the infringement through Udemy's reporting process as well, and then yes, I'll report to Bing and Google. I've had similar issues on my blog with content scraping. It's such a hassle, honestly. And this piracy site, it seems to be almost exclusively Udemy courses. Such a joke. I really do agree that Udemy could be more rigorous in not allowing anonymous sign-ups.

    As for continuing with Udemy, I'm not sure at this point. I also use Teachable, which I love, and have never had issues with. But it's about helping people, right. And Udemy is a great platform with which to expand your reach and help more people.

    I will think on the drip content idea, etc. Thank you again!

    Sabrina

  • The same thing happened to me as well. As soon as I uploaded my course at udemy, the next moment I saw it appear on the pirate web sites.

    Yet my course was on premium price. I do not know how Udemy cannot prevent such theft.

    The thieves' actions are obvious: they pay for the course, download it and then ask for refund. Perhaps, Udemy could make the refunding somewhat more difficult.

    Or we need to come up with some clever ideas so that they will not bother downloading it.

    I do not know how other teaching platforms such as Teachable and the likes prevent this kind of theft.

    Fevzi

  • I created a new course a few weeks ago. As soon as it was approved by Udemy, 3 students bought the course, even if it wasn't indexed by Udemy and before I had made any announcements about it. How is this possible?

    Of course, after a short time they refunded the course. So my assumption is that there are multiple accounts and they download different parts of courses, in order to bypass the refund limit.

    My conclusion is that Udemy is a paradise for internet bots, I've seen this so many times. Maybe Udemy likes this, since it creates the illusion of a bigger audience.

  • I feel the same about Udemy. The same thing happened to me a few months back. I informed the Udemy about the incidence. They could at least prevent the first buyers from refunding it. Somehow, the first buyers are the thieves who somehow purchase the course at reduced price even if the course is not placed in the Udemy Deals program. They do nothing about it. That demoralizes the teachers really.

  • Hi all

    Absolutely - each of my courses within a couple of weeks of going live there is always a user 'anonymous' from Egypt that purchases the course for a big discount (regardless of price) and then after a day downloading the content, refunds the course. Bam! It's then uploaded onto a pirate site. I don't know why we can't block anonymous users or from certain countries like we can on a certain marketplace site. I think it should be our choice to exclude certain countries from purchasing or users hiding behind anonymous details. I've yet to find a valid, genuine anonymous user.

  • Hi Tim- I am a new author and am just now finishing my first (of what I hope to be many) course. How are you searching for your courses? How would I know if someone pirated my course? Please advise. I'm inclined to agree with Thor that this may be par for the course (no pun), but I'd still like to know if my material is stolen, even if I can't prevent it or punish them. Thanks!

  • Thank you for this outline of steps to take. I am new and will incorporate them from the start. Though I am exhausted reading what is required to protect your property, I don't want others profiting off my sweat. Thank you~

  • I noticed this behavior and concluded that the first anonymous purchase might be the (contract-based) reviewer hired by Udemy. You might have noticed that only instructors and co-creators have admin rights to watch content in a dedicated preview mode. A discount coupon for third-party contracts/or full-time employee reviewers can be accommodated to save software costs. To get paid, they must refund the course. I can imagine the sales algorithms ignoring the first few sales; this is cleanly swiped under the carpet.

    @Bella
    , please confirm with the product team if such mechanisms are in place.

  • Alexia
    Alexia Posts: 457 mentor rank

    I was wondering why I had several refunds in January. This is a long term course that historically had one refund in 3 years, and suddenly bam….all the sales from Black Friday refunded.

  • Don't let this get you down. My very first Udemy course was pirated the day it was launched. The exciting thing is that it is my best-selling course. When someone pirates your course, it's not a lost sale because they never had any intention of buying it. Please do not let something as common as piracy stop you from creating courses. These people work full-time to take everybody's stuff. And honestly, that's not the audience you want to cultivate anyway. They are NOT purchasers or even prospective students. That said, I have ignored all forms of piracy of my courses. Had I let them get to me and taken down my courses I never would have made the money I have that changed my life. I would never have had over 100K students. Create more not less and do not give up.

  • Hi

    I do a Google and Bing search for my course name plus "download", "free" and inspect the entries in the first 10 pages or so. Some are legit, and could be affiliates so be really careful of those. Others are obviously dodgy sites, bulletin boards etc. I found that most sites will link to the same content on file sharing sites. There are about 5 main file sharing sites. Once you find the links, make a list and then so a DMCA request on the file sharing site page. Most sites have one. Most respond within about 48 hours or so. Once you kill the head of the snake - where the content is actually located then the pirate sites don't matter as they then link to dead links. Actually these pirate sites can act as a form of advertising as, dead links will frustrate any one looking for an easy picking.