Hey everyone, just curious how you guys go about protecting your writing and ideas. I’m very much an amateur but would really like to start sharing my writing, short stories etc. But I’m not sure how you go about protecting yourself from your work getting stolen?
- Laxaria ( @Laxaria@beehaw.org ) English7•1 year ago
By and large, anything you post publicly available online is copyrighted to you even if you did not necessarily file out all the paperwork needed to be so. Having a good track record and sourcing of your original work will do good, but ultimately there’s not much that can be done about it being “stolen” in so far as someone taking a copy of it, posting it elsewhere, and claiming credit.
If you want to vigorously hold onto your ideas then you just don’t want to talk about them to anyone but people you trust. You can’t copyright an idea and there’s nothing stopping someone from being successful with an idea you posited. The Inheritance series of novels by Paolini is consistently criticized as a fantasy rewrite of Star Wars but there’s not much LucasFilms et al. can do with that.
If you’re interested in building a portfolio of work, then sharing your writing is a way to advance that goal and therefore sharing is in your interests. If you just want to share some writing because you want others to read it, and have no particular considerations about monetization, I would avoid obsessing about the plagiarism/theft thing. Not that it isn’t important, but it’s not an immediate consideration.
Do not make publicly available anything you hope to monetize.
Fantastic this is the kind of answer I was looking for. Sage advice
- Mewtong ( @Mewtong@beehaw.org ) English6•1 year ago
I think in early stages it would be better to just concentrate on getting better. On the internet there’s not any way to stop your writing from potentially being redistributed, but likely no one will want to steal it either.
- DemBones ( @DemBones@vlemmy.net ) English1•1 year ago
In our opinion, concerns about IP are way overblown.
Very rarely do people get their work stolen. This only tends to happen when someone with superior publishing capabilities gets a hold on a really good draft from you and publishes it before yourself. If someone just claims to be the author of something you made after you published it, no matter how where, they’ve got zero plausible deniability as long as the first publisher may easily be determined.
If you’re really paranoid about someone impersonating you, you can sign your works with gpg. Then as long as nobody steals or hacks your computer you should be fine.