H
HandsInTheDark
Guest
This may be true in some jurisdictions for all I know, but not for the USA. 17 USC 107 states that one factor to be considered in determining whether copyright has been violated is "the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work." If the market value is zero, then that makes it harder to establish infringement..
As pilot and others have noted, there's no money to be made if a story gets stolen from here.
However I've successfully done DCMA notices and gotten my stuff pulled from other sites, and did it while providing a bare minimum of personal information. (That is, I've done it twice and it worked both times.)
You satisfy the "value" issue mentioned above because your reason for publishing here is to establish a market and do market research (both of which have "value"), and for that you need control over your content, and access to and control over any comments that are made. Yes, it's a flimsy argument and could be torn to shreds in court, but you aren't going to court. All that maters is that you can legitimately claim copyright, and that means you can file a DCMA take-down.
In my limited experience, these rip-off sites would rather take down your story than spend a single second arguing with a DCMA notice. They have no idea if they'll get in trouble if they ignore it and they don't want to find out. They get their income from a trickle of advertising, and advertisers drop sites that make any trouble.
tl;dr: your hammer may be made of soft rubber and squeak when you hit things, but to them all hammers are scary. So go for it.