Over the last few days one of my friends has been having an interesting time with a National television programme.
My friend is a Wild Foods blogger. She writes about and is interviewed for her expertise in harvesting and preparing wild food. The television programme in question was using her recipe in a cooking demonstration on the show and attributing them to their guest celebrities on the programmes website. Unfortunately they weren’t acknowledging her in any way or the other chefs whose recipes were taken and appropriated by the show.
If you post things on the internet you take the risk of having someone like it so much they use it and claim it as their own. This is plagiarism. For some scummy people it is fair game and the amount of website content that is stolen and repackaged as eBooks is frightening. Be careful about the eBooks you buy. The best thing you can do on your websites is to say copyright on your content somewhere on the front page or to use a creative commons licence. A Creative Commons license means people can use your work (but not make money off it) so long as they attribute it to you. There are various licenses that you can use. Check out this cool video that tells you all about it.
My friend received a sort of an apology this morning from the TV show. What her friends were wondering on Face Book was How come the TV Network can have teams of lawyers looking out for any breach of copyright on their own behalf but can allow their programmes to not offer the same courtesy back.
Acknowledgement takes only a moment and shows that you are a fair person and a responsible internet user.
Cory Doctorow has a great post on donations to creative people as a direct interface between reader and writer. He is documenting his self pubbed ebook, ‘With A Little Help,’ experiment through his blog and Publishers Weekly column. ‘Pay The Creator You Love’ is the catch phrase and Cory is all for it.
Bubblecow have a great post on Seven Publishing Companies who have embraced ebook and ebook marketing in creative ways. They are respecting their authors and the creative content.
Google have been rolling out their Google plus site. This is direct competition to Facebook. Greg Pincus checks out what Google has to offer for authors with Google plus. Lets be careful out there.
In the Craft Corner
I read a lot. It is called research. (hehehe) At tax time I get to count up all the books I have bought for research purposes and wince a little. I try to be careful in what I buy, after all I might be called upon to explain to the taxman why I claimed it on my tax return. Yesterday a package of books arrived for me from the wonderful Book Depository (they have free delivery and to NZ that is a Godsend.) In the pack was a book (which I can’t get here easily) by my favourite midgrade author Gordon Korman. Last night I devoured it and started it all over again today. Why am I telling you this? Gordon has a great handle on voice and first lines and I just happen to have links to great posts on these.
I was thirteen the first time I saw a police officer up close. He was arresting me for driving without a license. At the time, I didn't even know what a license was. I wasn't too clear on what being arrested meant either. Schooled by Gordon Korman
Check out First lines by The Writers Alley and Tips on Discovering Your Characters Voice from the wonderful Bookshelf Muse Team.
Cheryl Reif has a good post on Ten Ways To Craft A Sense Of Place
Over on Craicerplus (My Amplify Page) I have links to articles on
The Art Of Being Different- Justine Musk is an inspiration.
6 Ways To Improve Face Book Fan Pages
The 7 Ways To Improve Viral Videos
To Finish,
Tony Eldridge has posted a few gems on his blog this week. First he talks about the impact Dean Wesley Smiths Brilliant idea (which I have blogged about and if you haven’t read it Do So Now) has been on the marketing of his book and second he has a link to great freebies for authors to check out...
enjoy,
maureen
pic from here
2 comments:
As usual, some really interesting links about the changes in publishing, Maureen.(Fascinated by the Humble Indie Bundle mentioned in Cory Doctorow's article.)
Re the palgiarism - the whole thing was a really interesting insight into the powers of social media!
The internet allowed easy plagiarism, but it also meant that it could be discovered easily.
Facebook then allowed me to deal with it in a much better and well-thought-out way than I otherwise would have. I had almost instant access to a range of opinions, ideas, and advice from friends, acquaintances, and friends of friends, and I felt like I was relying on them every step of the way.
And then finally - blogging actually was what kickstarted the resolution to the problem. After two and a half days of a few private emails and complaints, very little had been resolved. But as soon as I blogged it and told the studio I had done so, things moved VERY fast.
Anyhow, thanks for all your help Maureen!!!
My pleasure Johanna! You have been in the middle of it and we have been watching from the sidelines but we too have learned the power of social media. I am glad that they finally realised that the little guy won't roll over any more for them!
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