I always register a TLD for my games and I think that might be why my games have always managed to stay at the top of the results, but they are followed by loads of people embedding the game, look at the search results for xordle for example. Many other authors would share their game on github pages or replit or whatever and were not so lucky.
In case you're interested, though, I just wanted to point out that there are things you can do.
In my experience, Google does respond to requests to scrub infringing sites from their results if you submit their Copyright Claim form. They even give you a dashboard with the status of your claims. Probably worth trying your luck if you can be bothered.
Also, many of the theives have X and Bluesky accounts, and I don't believe either of these services let users censor replies to them.
There's also the payment platforms that are collecting money for your stolen work on behalf of these guys. They might be interested to hear about what's going on.
Then there's the hosting companies themselves, of course, hosting the infringing websites.
It's a pain, and it would be better if you could just create stuff and people weren't shitty, but we live in a fallen world and sometimes you gotta defend yourself. Up to you, of course, and I totally get it if you don't have the energy, but I've been through the same thing and you do have some power.
You can hate it, but for the creative types your options are: Assume it fails and no one knows about it / Assume it succeeds get stolen / build it on the server side
About ~16 years ago i wrote a scripting language i called LIL[0] (which, like the author, i also hooked up in a HyperCard-like program[1][2]), meaning Little Interpreted Language, but whenever i search for it on Google or DDG, my site never shows up - instead, both show a GitHub repository[3] that someone made and hasn't been updated in 15 years (and has outdated links) and sometimes the Tcl wiki page about it[4] (which at least points to the correct homepage) or even Rosetta code[5] since sometime added LIL to it some time ago.
Amusingly DDG's AI summary does describe my LIL but it links to the outdated GitHub repo and the Tcl wiki page. Then if you click the "More" button it describes Beyond Loom's Lil. The "Explore more" links however do a mix of both (one even mixes both languages in the same response :-P).
[0] http://runtimeterror.com/tech/lil/
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8CYosAIIJw
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rshZHDDruAE
[3] https://github.com/wsxiaoys/lil
I also wish LLM copies were not crowding out actual artists.
I won’t link it, and I won’t do a write up to retain effectiveness, but I have already found at least 3 vibe coded slop projects on GitHub that include my deliberately buggy code verbatim, and it makes me very happy.
I’m curious if this article is directed towards them or the clones that are impersonating the WigglyPaint brand.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=y0BerpDmVSE
(sorry, that effect gives me 90s flashbacks)
Further, if your idea is simple to copy it will be copied. See Threes vs 2048. Sure, yours might be best for some defintion of "best". Maybe? A recent example is the Suika Game. It's a game, once you know the idea, you could write, without an LLM, in a few hours. And so there are 100s of clones. The original has some deliberate design choices that some of the clones might have missed. On the other hand, it's got some bad choices that I'm guessing some of the clones didn't bother to copy. Further, it's a simple idea so it's easy to make and then add stuff.
As for wigglypaint, it's not a new idea. Dr. Katz was made in Autodesk Animator in the mid 90.s https://youtu.be/XxhS0U9-Z84?t=154
Neither is the "draw under the lines" a new idea. Two I know of, the Paper App (iOS) and MyPaint (Amiga, 1991). I'm sure there are others.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
> Please don't comment on whether someone read an article. "Did you even read the article?
I get that it's frustrating - that's what open source allows though. I used to run a blog. I ran a few websites, open sourced, that were similar in a general way (users can make stuff on the site and share it others). I found the site duplicated. In fact it's still duplicated to this day. Oh well.