Someone Cloned Your Business: Your Legal Options (Owner’s Guide)
If you run a local business, few things are more unsettling than discovering that someone has copied your name, your address, or your entire website to pose as you. It happened to us. We are Austin's Affordable Garage Doors, owned by Austin Little here in Fremont, California, and a clone site went up using our real business name and our real shop address while quietly swapping in a different phone number. This guide walks through what to do if your business name has been stolen and lays out the realistic website cloned legal options available to small-business owners. This is general consumer and business information, not formal legal advice.
What a Business Clone Actually Looks Like
Impersonation is rarely sloppy. In our case, a domain (austinsaffordablegaragedoors.com) was registered in September 2025 through an overseas registrar, hosted abroad, with the registrant's identity hidden behind privacy redaction. The site copied our real name and our real Fremont address (40735 Creston St) but substituted a different phone number — a VoIP line — so that calls intended for us would be intercepted. Tellingly, the clone still leaked our genuine number, (510) 694-9699, in one of its links, which shows the page was lifted directly from our own materials.
To be clear for our own customers: the only real number for our business is (510) 694-9699. We are not affiliated with a copycat number or with anyone else using our name. If you are a business owner reading this because the same thing is happening to you, the pattern below will feel familiar.
First Steps: Document Everything Before It Disappears
Clone operators often take pages down or rotate domains the moment they sense scrutiny, so evidence-gathering comes first.
- Screenshot the entire clone site, including the URL bar, dates, and any pages showing your name, address, photos, or fake testimonials.
- Save the WHOIS / domain registration record showing the registrar, hosting provider, and registration date.
- Use the Wayback Machine (web.archive.org) to capture a permanent, time-stamped archive of the page.
- Log every customer who reports confusion — calls that went to the wrong number, mischarges, or jobs you never performed. This documents real harm.
- Capture any hijacked listings. In our case, a Yelp listing was made to display the substituted number; note exactly which platforms are affected.
Your Legal Options as the Real Owner
Several distinct legal avenues exist, and they are not mutually exclusive. You can pursue more than one at once.
1. Trademark Impersonation Claims
You do not need a federally registered trademark to have rights. Under common-law trademark and unfair-competition principles, the business that first uses a name in commerce in a given area generally has the senior right to it. Using your name to confuse your customers is the core of a trademark impersonation claim. A registered mark (through the USPTO) strengthens your position and unlocks federal remedies, but established local use already gives you standing to demand the copycat stop.
2. Cease-and-Desist Letter
A formal letter from you or your attorney, sent to the registrant, host, and any platform displaying the clone, is often the fastest practical lever. It creates a paper trail, sets a deadline, and frequently triggers takedowns even when the operator is hard to identify directly.
3. Domain Dispute (UDRP)
If a domain incorporates your business name in bad faith, the Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) lets you file to have it transferred or cancelled, often without a courtroom. This is a strong tool when, as in our situation, the domain is privacy-shielded and registered abroad.
4. False Advertising and Unfair Competition
California's Unfair Competition Law (Business & Professions Code §17200) and the federal Lanham Act both reach conduct that misleads consumers about who they are dealing with. Passing off one business as another is squarely the kind of conduct these laws were written to address.
5. Platform and Provider Takedowns
Most hosts, registrars, and listing platforms have abuse and impersonation reporting channels. File with the hosting company, the domain registrar, Google Business Profile, Yelp, and any directory carrying the false listing. Attach your documentation. Platform takedowns can be faster than litigation.
Report It to Authorities
Beyond civil remedies, impersonation that defrauds consumers is worth reporting:
- FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov
- FBI's IC3 (Internet Crime Complaint Center) at ic3.gov
- Your state Attorney General (in California, oag.ca.gov)
- The Better Business Bureau, which builds the public record
Why This Matters Beyond One Business
These clones are rarely one-off pranks. The garage-door industry has a documented history of "scam mill" operations — for example, public records and BBB complaints around "Neighborhood Garage Door Service" in Texas describe overcharging and pressure tactics, and a broader reported scheme is alleged to have run a thousand or more domains and fake map listings funneling calls to a central call center that dispatched gig workers. When one front is shut down, another reportedly reopens under a new name. That is exactly why documentation, takedowns, and reporting matter: each report makes the next clone easier to dismantle.
Protect Your Customers in the Meantime
While the legal process runs, communicate plainly. Tell your customers your real number, publish a non-affiliation notice, and ask anyone who suspects a copycat to verify before paying. For us, that message is simple: the real Austin's Affordable Garage Doors is owned by Austin Little in Fremont, and our only phone number is (510) 694-9699. If someone reaches a different number using our name, it is not us.
If your own business has been cloned, move quickly, preserve evidence, and consider speaking with an attorney who handles trademark and unfair-competition matters. You have more options than it feels like in the first panicked hour.
Talk to the Real Austin's Affordable Garage Doors
Locally owned by Austin Little in Fremont, CA. Our only number is (510) 694-9699. Senior & military discounts.
Call (510) 694-9699