There is nothing you can do. Not a blessed thing. The moment you put your work on a website, you can kiss it good bye. It can and will be stolen and there is nothing you can do about it.,
Sure, you can copyright it, but how do you intend to enforce that copyright? A copyright is only as good as the lawyer you get to protect it. And lawyers cost money and lots of it. And what do you do if the person who plagtiarizes you is half way across the world? Where do you sue them?? Halfway in the middle?
The so called "poor man's copyright" is not worth the 42 cent stamp. It can be beaten so many ways it isn't funny. And it doesn't prove you wrote the material, it just proves that on a certain day you were in possession of certain pages. I could cut and paste, back up the date on my hard drive and burn a disk showing I had it two years earlier. It means nothing and no judge in the world would accept it as evidence.
And publishers have begun rejecting any and all material previously published online. There is no way for them to ensure you are the rightful owner without spending a small fortune in lawyers and so they just reject the work.
There is only one way to protect your work and that is not to publish it online anywhere. You technically own your work the moment you write it. That is your intellectual property. However what you do with it after that determines how long it remains your property. Post it online and kiss it good-bye.
Let me tell you a story. As a gift for a friend I once wrote him a very good story for his website. He posted it. About a year later, another friend sends me this e mail with an attachment. The e mail says "You HavE to read this story it is great!!" I opened the attachment to find MY story with someone else's name on it. They didn't even bother to change the names of my characters. Word for word. I lost a great short story and closed my website forever. Now I post nothing online.
Well OK - one exception. I have a fan fic on the Colbert Nation site under Persiphone Hellecat. You can read it if you want.
----
They're, Their, There - Three Different Words.
Careful or you may wind up in my next novel.
Pax - C
2007-10-23 12:48:00
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answer #1
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answered by Persiphone_Hellecat 7
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That relies upon. Are you making plans on attempting to get this actual artwork printed via a expert publishing living house? if so, then do no longer positioned it online, because of the fact this is considered "booklet" and the sole rights you could furnish are reprint rights. usually, publishers do no longer choose those. in case you pick evaluations on your writing, then you definately can connect online critique communities, including Critters, or you will detect a community writers' team. or you could positioned up it someplace like LiveJournal or Googledocs below a lock that basically some human beings can study--this is okay. yet once you're unlikely to objective and get this actual artwork printed, then publishing it on the internet is fantastic.
2016-10-04 11:05:59
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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You can get it published by a traditional publishing house or you could not post it online.
You really can't stop anyone from stealing your work. If you put some of your writing on a website then you can't stop the people who visit that site from copying your work. It may be tempting to put your work online but if you do then your work will be stolen.
If you want people to read your work and comment on it then try giving it to people you trust:
*friends (friends can steal!)
*I give a LOT of my writing to my Private tutor who teaches me English. She gives me a lot of advice and doesn't steal my work because she marks my work and then gives it back straight away
*parents but they are REALLY biased
*cousins that enjoy reading.
If you really want to put your work online then start spending money. make a website and upload your website to premium. you can do this on freewebs. then make it all password protected so you choose if you want the person can view your work. if the person copies your work then you let them view it so it really is your fault.
Usually, the second you write the piece, it becomes copyright but you can't enforce it so that seems to be the problem. you can also disable right click on your website but that won't stop anyone from taking your work.
this message may not have helped you a great deal so sorry. the best thing you can do to stop people from copying your work is to not show it to anyone. if you want people to see it then try getting an agent who will help you get your book published. the books then becomes copyright and if the book is a success then the book becomes harder to plagiarise!
2007-10-25 03:02:25
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answer #3
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answered by Vampyr 3
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Honestly, originality these days are just so overrated. These peoples want a plot, a mystery, something different. But they'r taking the ideas of others and copying them down, with different name and maybe a slightly different twist. Only a handful of authors are try amazing enough to write something all their own that cannot be compared to any other person's writing, or theme, or plot.
For original work you could put it on: http://www.fictionpress.com/
For fanfiction: http://www.fanfiction.net/
For a challenge: http://www.nanowrimo.org/
Or you can find gropus on livejournal.com. They work the same.
Make a yahoo gropu. Express your imagination. We need literature out there.
2007-10-23 12:02:25
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answer #4
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answered by Lily 2
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Honestly, you're work is copy-writed the moment you write it. I don't know of any ways to keep people from copy and pasting fiction to their hard-drive either. I'm pretty good with computers, but not that computer-savvy. Hope I helped a little bit at least.
2007-10-23 11:56:03
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answer #5
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answered by Neb92 2
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