06-29-2010, 02:27 PM | #31 | |
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Your definition of whether it's a good time or a bad time to be an author seems predicated on whether or not you can make a reasonable amount of money writing. We are in a structural deflation in the highly developed countries. This deflation is the result of computer/telecommunication technology. Many, many professions are finding their earnings power badly weakened by this deflation. Much of the current economic malaise is due to this structural deflation. Writers and publishers are being hit as well. The "pie" in the writing business is shrinking. The author may be enabled to get a greater piece of the "pie" at the expense of the publisher, but that does not stop the shrinkage. You seem to want laws to stop the shrinkage. Question, why is stopping the shrinkage for writers more important than accountants, engineers, and computer programmers. (Or paralegals and non-partner lawyers)? (Widespread piracy has been created by technology, not by people's lack of morality. They were just as (im)moral in the 1950's, they just didn't have the technology to do anything with...) Last edited by Greg Anos; 06-29-2010 at 02:30 PM. |
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06-29-2010, 03:41 PM | #32 | |
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Not exactly: I'd like laws to level the playing field and better prevent IP theft... not the same thing. Nowhere have I said that we must stop the bad economy from shrinking the purses of authors, nor that authors are more important than any other group. If authors make less because the economy is bad... oh well. But if authors are making less because their property is being stolen in larger degrees... that is something to address. |
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06-29-2010, 04:06 PM | #33 |
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What do you want the laws to say?
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06-29-2010, 04:13 PM | #34 |
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That it is illegal to steal my IP and punishable by law.
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06-29-2010, 04:50 PM | #35 |
Pulps and dime novels...
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06-29-2010, 04:53 PM | #36 |
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06-29-2010, 06:07 PM | #37 | |
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You're looking though the wrong end of the telescope. The bad economy is not shrinking the purses of people. The technological changes are devaluing the worth of skilled labor. The same for accountants, engineers, programmers, and authors. Some because the low cost of modern telecom has made it cheaper to do labor substitution, some because cheap technology has made the cost of duplication approach zero. But both are caused by cheap technology in the last 10+ years. My point is - why is the labor of authors more deserving of structural protection than all the other sorts of labor who value has be decreased because of technology. I don't think that is an unfair question to ask. |
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06-29-2010, 06:08 PM | #38 |
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If someone has infringed your IP rights isn't it up to you to do something about it? The law seems to be there to define what constitutes an infringement and what remedies are available.
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06-29-2010, 06:10 PM | #39 |
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It is already illegal to copy your books, and it is already punishable by law. That's taken care of.
If you could write the law you want, anything you want, what would it say? |
06-29-2010, 06:11 PM | #40 |
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What baffles me is why so many people think the publishing world is that different from the way it's always been.
Yes, there are more avenues for indie authors to publish their work for free (or as near as damn it to it) so everyone can get their work to the masses. But...it is still a fact that if a book it to achieve broad and profitable success, it requires proper editing, proofing, publication, promotion and marketing. This is only available from a traditional agent and publisher relationship. Great books still get published, good books might and bad and mediocre books don't. Publishers and agents are always looking for original, quality books that are commercial and will sell - it's what their jobs depend on. If you write a book like this, your chances of becoming a successful author are the same as they have always been. I don't think the odds of becoming a successful writer have shortened with the introduction of electronic self-publishing, but if I'm honest, I don't think they've improved that much either... |
06-29-2010, 06:13 PM | #41 |
Jeffrey A. Carver
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I would say it's a very difficult time to be a working professional writer. I'm not sure there ever was an easy time. (I'm not dissing semipro or amateur writers, by the way; I'm just talking for the moment about the professional aspects of writing. Fiction writing, because that's what I know.)
Traditional paper publishing is still the way most money is being made, but less and less of that money is getting to the midlist authors. (The bestselling authors seem to be doing just fine.) Distribution has gone all to hell with just a few companies controlling most of the market, so many books (my own included) no longer get decent distribution. Lots of good writers with good track records are seeing a steady decline in sales with new books. Publishers have been slow to catch on to ebook publishing, and still aren't doing a very good job of it. On the other hand, there are probably all kinds of opportunities in the wildly shifting landscape for those agile enough, or lucky enough (and luck is a huge factor in this) to catch the right wave. I don't need to say much about indie publishing to people here, and I'm hardly an expert on the subject. Cory Doctorow, who already enjoys huge popularity, is trying his own indie publishing experiment. It's probably safe to say that the authors who also have a streak of marketing acumen will do better than those who really are at their best just writing, and who depend on others for the marketing. On the other other hand, the explosion of new outlets for new and indie writers means it's harder and harder for anyone to stand out, and harder to sift the wheat from the chaff. And then there's the increasing competition from other forms of entertainment. Do I worry that novels and other forms of fiction might be a dying (or at least fading) art form? Yeah, I do. I don't think it will go away anytime soon. But it seems dominated more and more every year by the blockbusters, while the relative audience for other stuff--at least for the individual work--shrinks. My own chosen field, science fiction books, is definitely dwindling. Could all of this change next year? Absolutely. But how? That's the question we all wish we could answer. |
06-29-2010, 06:34 PM | #42 |
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Hey... do I look like a lawyer or a law-writer? I can barely handle sci-fi! So no, I'm not going to try to phrase the perfect set of pro-writer laws.
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06-29-2010, 06:39 PM | #43 | |
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06-29-2010, 06:43 PM | #44 | |
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People not trained in marketing and promotion can't do it properly. While it's true there are more avenues for the amateur to have a go at it...they won't be any good. Just like anything in life, to do a job well you need practise, training and the right skill set. Writer's write, publishers publish and marketers market. Twas ever thus. So putting those jobs in the hands of the writer is a bad thing IMO! |
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06-29-2010, 06:49 PM | #45 | |
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For example, "Anyone posting spam for DVD editing software on MobileRead should be put in the stocks in the town square, with the proceeds from sales of rotten vegetables to throw at him used to defray MR's server costs." What laws pro-writer laws do you want to see? |
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fair use, security, the almighty dollar, writing and technology |
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