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Creator Replaces Stolen Tutorial Photos, What Appeared On The Thief’s Page Shocked Everyone

by Marry Anna
November 1, 2025
in Social Issues

Online creators know the frustration of pouring hours into a project only to have someone else copy it word-for-word. That’s exactly what happened to one Redditor who built a detailed tutorial showing how to craft a replica movie prop.

Every step, every photo, every bit of effort, was stolen and reposted on another site as if it were someone else’s original work.

Instead of giving in to anger, this creator decided to fight back with a clever twist.

Creator Replaces Stolen Tutorial Photos, What Appeared On The Thief’s Page Shocked Everyone
Not the actual photo

'Steal my online tutorial? I hope you enjoy the new pics?'

Years ago (around 15), I was into creating replica movie props.

I had created a tutorial for my website on building a movie prop gun using a kit I bought and the base airsoft gun.

It was a step-by-step on how to use the kit and incorporate it with the gun—pics on every step, etc. I got a lot of positive feedback for it, too.

But, I discovered when checking my website traffic and stats that another site was leeching my photos (meaning they had code on their website that HREF'd the images on my...

When I checked it out, I saw that they had copied my ENTIRE tutorial and made a post on their website claiming it as their own.

No reference back to me or my site. You b__tard. So, I did what anyone would do. I changed the images. Oh boy, did I change them.

In my code, I changed the image names from "image1.jpg" to "image\_1.jpg" and changed my code accordingly to point to the new file names.

My website looked the same. BUT THEN...

I found some of the craziest and nastiest photos on the web and renamed them "image1.jpg" etc, to match what code HE had stolen and dropped them in the same...

So, now the thief has a tutorial that talks about making a movie prop, but all the leaked images associated with it were a cornucopia of nightmare fuel, HR complaints,...

Oh, yeah, it was n__ty stuff. Now, I just watched. The stolen tutorial was up for about 4 days until it magically disappeared.

I think I might even still have screenshots somewhere, lol. Never happened again. Don't steal content!

There’s a certain betrayal to having your work plagiarized. This was not an abstract offense; it was a public impersonation. The creator could have gone legal, filed a takedown, or coded server protections.

Instead, she did something surgical and theatrical: she changed the image filenames and then filled the old filenames with…unexpected content. When the thief’s page tried to load “image1.jpg,” they got a replacement worthy of a double-take.

The tutorial copy stayed online for four days before vanishing. The creator still laughs about screenshots she took. It’s an act of petty genius, but it also exposes a modern truth, copyright wars are messy, and the web’s plumbing sometimes enables theft.

There are practical lessons beneath the drama. Hotlinking is common enough that many hosts and site admins plan for it, using .htaccess rules, referer checks, or content delivery networks that block off-site embedding, because serving other people’s pages eats bandwidth and can leave the original site vulnerable.

If you publish original images, adding simple server rules or using images that require authorization to serve can prevent this kind of leeching.

Psychologically, acts like this live in the gray zone between vindication and escalation. Getting even can feel immediately satisfying; it delivers a jolt of control after the powerlessness of being copied.

But psychologists warn that revenge seldom repairs the original harm: it soothes the avenger more than it restores the relationship, and it can spawn cycles of retaliation.

In this case, the creator’s prank removed the stolen content quickly and made a point, without going to court. She reclaimed agency, and the internet loved the irony.

Legally, the standard path is a DMCA notice or similar takedown request, especially if the site is hosted in jurisdictions that respond to copyright claims. That’s effective, but it can be slow or expensive.

For creators, the best immediate moves are documentation (screenshots, timestamps), blocking hotlinking, and reaching out to the host or platform, then escalate with a formal takedown if needed.

The creator’s story is a reminder: you can protect your work with tech and paperwork, but sometimes a bold, creative fix communicates both consequence and amusement.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

These users backed the OP’s clever retaliation, sharing how they’d faced similar online theft and handled it the same way.

DedBirdGonnaPutItOnU − I once found my entire website copied to a CD and being sold on eBay. So I understand what you went through. I wish I had your recourse!

mermaidpaint − I had photos copied from an eBay listing. So I made some new photos about how wrong it is to steal photos. Solved the problem!

AJRimmer1971 − We had similar issues. We were running an e-commerce store (until COVID) for party supplies.

We were really successful, and noticed that one lazy eBay seller was linking to our images, even though they were watermarked.

Bad form. We changed the images to lovely new ones that said, "I steal from others", "not a reputable seller", "terrible feedback ahead".

They were obviously lazy, because 6 months later, I removed the images, and they were still pulling traffic, though not as much.

We relinked our images, as they were still in use by us.

[Reddit User] − My inner nerd would like to know what the prop was, please! I love browsing the RPF and reading stuff like that.

These Redditors geeked out over the technical side of things.

thepeopleseason − Back when I cared about the content I had on my site, I switched out images to Tubgirl when people would try to embed my images on their...

punklinux − There was code at some point that would know if an href was done locally versus remotely, and if it was remote, you'd get a single default image.

"Please visit \[original website\] for the actual content: this message means this image was stolen."

bg-j38 − This happened to me probably 20 years ago. I had some random family photos on my personal website that were all hand-built HTML.

At some point, I noticed one of the photos had like 10x the traffic than the others.

I looked at the referral logs, and it was all coming from MySpace or some similar early social media platform.

Went and found that some girl had linked directly to the photo in her profile and was claiming it was her family enjoying wine on a patio in Europe.

Really weird, but it was getting consistent traffic for some reason. So I did what you did and changed it to Goastse.

I guess she didn’t check her account very often because I’d check back every couple of days, and there were tons of comments like “Why are you posting such disgusting...

Eventually, she noticed and took it all down, but I was laughing for a while about that.

SouthTippBass − What color of waffle did you upload?

This group kept the humor light, teasing the OP for not sharing the screenshots while applauding the pettiness.

nuwildcatfan − I mean, we don't know how petty the revenge is without the screenshots...heh.

lostinthesnakepit − So, I looked and I could not find the screenshots or the "bad" version of the site.

I did find the original tutorial, and it's still tucked away on my site. I was wrong about the year, though. I made it in 2006. Good times. :-)

The two users both shared how absurd and entertaining the early web could be.

VonAether − Had something similar happen. I run a wiki about a publishing company's fictional worlds.

One of the many vast organizations in one of these worlds is the [Technocratic Union](https://whitewolf.fandom.com/wiki/Technocratic_Union), aka the Technocracy.

The social engineering division of the Technocracy is the New World Order, and their henchmen are, of course, the Men in Black.

Rather than rip me off wholesale, someone missed the whole "fiction" part of this endeavour and mix-and-matched the contents of my wiki with real-world c__spiracy theories involving the NWO, MIB,...

He linked to my wiki as a source for his claims. And he hotlinked the Technocratic Union symbol directly from my wiki.

The former bugged me more than the latter, but I can't stop someone from linking to my site. So I changed the image link.

My Wiki visually remained unchanged. His website got served a goatse. It was a couple of weeks before he noticed and took his page down.

CoderJoe1 − I don't know why, but it reminded me of the Microsoft support website that had step-by-step instructions for how to apply to work at McDonald's for people who...

It was hilarious, but they took it down eventually.

These commenters applauded the OP’s boldness.

wbrameld4 − I did the same thing with my (now defunct) fractal image website. Same basic story: My server logs showed some of my images getting leaked.

They were linked from a forum. I replaced them with the nastiest pornography I could find.

itisrainingweiners − Lol. I got a lot of enjoyment doing that back in the day - here, enjoy some goatse!

A couple of the copycats even had the balls to send me pissed off, "HOW DARE YOU" type emails when they discovered the changes.

I'm not sure how they thought that was going to help them, though.

delulu4drama − No doubt you fueled THEIR nightmares! 😵‍💫

This one’s a classic tale of poetic justice in the digital age. It’s a reminder that stealing creative work never ends well, especially when the original creator knows their way around a website.

Was the response fair play or too far? Would you have handled the theft the same way or confronted them directly? Share your thoughts and your own digital revenge stories below!

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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