Yikes! This is worrying. Anyone else experience similar?
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This is horrifying! I wonder what happens when the same thing goes on with books that are trad published. Other than for best sellers, do publishers of niche and mid-list books set their lawyers on the offenders and get the pirated material taken down? It seems that the hopes of having much budget dedicated to a first-time author by a trad publisher are low so I wonder what the difference would be compared to self-publishing? The whole thing is very discouraging, I must admit. However much you love writing, why struggle to publish only to have your work stolen with the thieves getting off scot free?It is a huge problem that will get bigger. It is one reason I'm not self-publishing three novels I have ready. I'm trying to learn more.
The History Press published my memoir In Service: The Story Of A Welsh Guardsman and on the same day of the launch hardback copies were available on Ebay. I queried this with the publisher and my agent at the time and discovered it was a loophople that had to do with the publisher selling damaged copies that I wouldn't earn a royalty on. A friend purchased a copy on Ebay and it was in perfect condition.
My point is we're surrounded by thieves, be they Amazon or Trad publishers.
Another story is about my first novel Raw Nerve. I self-pubbed and discovered shortly after pirate copies were available on a pirate site.
Is it really any worse than secondhand books shops selling your hard work without the author receiving a penny?
I don't know. I'm just going to keep writing because it is what I love to do.
At the moment I'm focused on scripts, but they're easily stolen too.....![]()
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Contracts are rather more nuanced than that. There ought to be a procedure agreed for this kind of thing, not the least part being who might pay for any subsequent legal action.I don’t know what I’ll do yet. Amazon’s the distributor, my publisher is the licensee, and I am the author, which means I’m the owner of the property that’s been stolen. By contract, a publisher must act if an author notifies them of an infringement;
Not so, see below.but in reality publishers can’t do much unless there is a good deal of money at stake.
Again, not really the case. It’s the role of the publisher to initially take action, and Amazon are generally pretty responsive. He may not be getting anywhere because of this. He needs to push his publisher a lot harder and get any agent involved, too.The author can act independently, and I have, from time to time, but it’s expensive.
Good to know. Aspiring authors should be aware of these details when they sign a contract, with or without an agent. This is theft of writers' hard graft and it's disheartening to hear that it's happening with impunity.Contracts are rather more nuanced than that. There ought to be a procedure agreed for this kind of thing, not the least part being who might pay for any subsequent legal action.
Not so, see below.
Again, not really the case. It’s the role of the publisher to initially take action, and Amazon are generally pretty responsive. He may not be getting anywhere because of this. He needs to push his publisher a lot harder and get any agent involved, too.
I'd like to know who that was. If you can’t name them publicly, send me a PM?And don't get me started on the courses publisher that stole one of my writing books, verbatim, and made it into a course...
I was thinking of your husband here, Roz. His versions looked so much better than the pirate's. How easy is it to digitally publish on your own website? I 'm wondering if one answer isnt to be able to publish on demand without an intermediary. Like a market stall. Canny buyers can at least then commit to buying from the creator,And don't get me started on the courses publisher that stole one of my writing books, verbatim, and made it into a course...
It’s entirely possible, but the weak link in the chain is delivery to the readers’ devices. Putting a non-Amazon-purchased ebook onto your Kindle can indeed be done, but it’s not intuitive and the majority of customers simply won’t do it because it’s too techie.I was thinking of your husband here, Roz. His versions looked so much better than the pirate's. How easy is it to digitally publish on your own website? I 'm wondering if one answer isnt to be able to publish on demand without an intermediary. Like a market stall. Canny buyers can at least then commit to buying from the creator,
In a word, yes.Not claiming dibs or anything, but t'was ever thus?
Hi Mel,This is horrifying! I wonder what happens when the same thing goes on with books that are trad published. Other than for best sellers, do publishers of niche and mid-list books set their lawyers on the offenders and get the pirated material taken down? It seems that the hopes of having much budget dedicated to a first-time author by a trad publisher are low so I wonder what the difference would be compared to self-publishing? The whole thing is very discouraging, I must admit. However much you love writing, why struggle to publish only to have your work stolen with the thieves getting off scot free?
Mine too. Absolutely.Personally, my blood boils when I hear tech bros ranting about how all books should be free.
The publisher's name is Smart Majority. They only make courses, not books, so you might not have come across them.I'd like to know who that was. If you can’t name them publicly, send me a PM?
ChatGPT will only make this easer for the pirates. The technology is excellent at paraphrasing.
Indie authors are now being encouraged to sell on their own websites, which is just about the same thing. There are plugins that let you create shops - Shopify, Payhip, WooCommerce. You need a host for the files unless you want to keep a server running yourself, and you need to deal with taxes in different territories. So the commerce plugins are good value because they do that boring legwork for you. You can even hook directly up to a print-on-demand company so people can buy print books from you.I was thinking of your husband here, Roz. His versions looked so much better than the pirate's. How easy is it to digitally publish on your own website? I 'm wondering if one answer isnt to be able to publish on demand without an intermediary. Like a market stall. Canny buyers can at least then commit to buying from the creator,
Never have done until now. Their website looks well dodgy:The publisher's name is Smart Majority. They only make courses, not books, so you might not have come across them.
I think the control has to come from the end user. With Indie writers I think readers will self-select to want something new and not the usual. Like Rock and Roll I think they will understand you have to go to the source to support the real thing. It is frustrating about Kindle. I did just buy Gypsy Rose Lee's out of print mystery on Amazon and now can read it on my computer which is a lot easier than with the Kindle. I wonder if that technology could be applied to websites?Indie authors are now being encouraged to sell on their own websites, which is just about the same thing. There are plugins that let you create shops - Shopify, Payhip, WooCommerce. You need a host for the files unless you want to keep a server running yourself, and you need to deal with taxes in different territories. So the commerce plugins are good value because they do that boring legwork for you. You can even hook directly up to a print-on-demand company so people can buy print books from you.
That doesn't get around the issue of piracy or plagiarism, though. Once someone gets your file, there are probably loads of ways to copy it.
And thanks for the compliment about Dave's books!