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4 votes
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We risk a deluge of AI-written ‘science’ pushing corporate interests
22 votes -
Ten desktop publishing tools that didn’t make it
19 votes -
Do you have a favorite publisher?
I've never really been one to look into publishers too much, with the extent of my interaction being that if I noticed they published some books I enjoyed I may go and look up what other authors...
I've never really been one to look into publishers too much, with the extent of my interaction being that if I noticed they published some books I enjoyed I may go and look up what other authors they've published to see if I'd also enjoy their books.
Are there any publishers you actively follow or subscribe to any newsletters for, or engage with in any way?
I thought it might be fun seeing how my fellow Tilders interact with publishers.
15 votes -
Inside arXiv — the most transformative platform in all of science
22 votes -
Boom Studios leaves LibraryPlus program after purchase by Penguin Random House
6 votes -
The anxiety of losing control of your original work in a digital age
I've been writing, editing and designing a book in my spare time for the last four years. After a pro edit, I finally got it to the point that I was comfortable sending it out to a few people in...
I've been writing, editing and designing a book in my spare time for the last four years. After a pro edit, I finally got it to the point that I was comfortable sending it out to a few people in my field for some feedback.
Meanwhile I've been reading up on self publishing and now I'm realizing how hard it is to stay in control of your work.
There are many warnings about scammers. As soon as you self publish on any of the common sites like Amazon or Ingram Spark, you will be contacted by "publishers" and "advertising experts" and "promoters" who all have an interest in trying to make a buck off you. Mostly they want to gain control of your work for their own benefit and some will post it for free even if you have it advertised at a low price elsewhere, just to gain traffic and views.
Getting your work pirated is almost a given for digital books. And how in the world do you stop THAT from happening when a PDF or ePUB file is super easy to copy and send in a second?
If that's not the greatest insult, with the help of AI, someone can easily copy your book and use AI to rewrite in a different voice or style and republish it as their own. The chances of proving that it was originally your work then become next to impossible. If it's completely rewritten is it still your work? How do you prove it?
I've done the best I can - copyright registered the book, applied for an ISBN number and have a watermark on the pre release copy. But it still feels pretty vulnerable.
I had never thought of these issues before I had something worth publishing but I suppose the same issues apply to just about any digital work - music, art, software. Trying to maintain control of your work in a digital age can easily be a game of Whack-A-Mole even if you want to spend your savings on lawyers and cease and desist letters and take down requests.
31 votes -
Starbreeze Studios has agreed to fully acquire the publishing rights for Payday 3 from Plaion to "pursue broader strategic opportunities" for the embattled franchise
12 votes -
Fourteen thousand World War I poems digitised
20 votes -
Slushkiller: an editor's perspective on rejection (2004)
12 votes -
Polygon sold to Valnet and hit with layoffs
45 votes -
Polygon sold to GameRant owner Valnet
6 votes -
New indie press Conduit Books launches with 'initial focus on male authors'
16 votes -
That joke isn't funny any more
29 votes -
A nonsense phrase has been occurring in scientific papers, suggesting artificial intelligence data contamination
53 votes -
Book publishers see surging interest in the US Constitution and print new editions
10 votes -
Sci-Net: A new social network platform to request and share research articles
24 votes -
Integrating a news publication into the Fediverse
8 votes -
Unbound goes into administration: Crowdfunders for book projects dropped by publisher 'won't receive refunds', authors told
7 votes -
Meta wins emergency arbitration ruling on tell-all book, Careless People by former employee Sarah Wynn-Williams - book promotion to be limited
89 votes -
Spotify paid out a record £7.7bn in royalties in 2024 – debate continues about how much money artists and songwriters receive in royalties
21 votes -
Waiting for a book in paperback? Good luck. Publishers increasingly give nonfiction authors one shot at print stardom, ditching paperbacks as priorities shift.
26 votes