DaddySatyr
Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011 From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: MrRodgers Really kinkroids ? Originators of material cannot plagiarize themselves. That's like saying Mozart plagiarized himself just to play one of his own works. I really wish you wouldn't refer to me as a "kinkroid", but I understand that it's not done out of a desire to engage in name-calling, per se. That to the side, as discussed earlier on in the thread, there is a possibility of a writer being under an exclusive contract to a publisher or being under a contract to write a political column and specifies they're not allowed to write political stuff for anyone else. It sucks, but it happens. There could, indeed, be a case where a writer could "plagiarize" themselves and it could cause some legal issues. Ex.: some writers have some "favorite" phrases to which they always "fall back". In the novel "The Godfather" Puzo describes Sonny Corleone about seven or eight times, using the term "heavy cupid face". Since these writers do have a tendency to do this, let's build a scenario: An author writes a book for XYZ Publishing Corp. In that book, he establishes, defines (for his own purposes) and uses a certain phrase/sentence. Let's suppose it's (I know this is someone else's quote, but I am not sure to whom it should be attributed): "Let's not turn perfection into the enemy of good." If the author has signed what I consider to be a domineering contract wherein the publisher holds the copyright instead of the author, when the author goes to work for "NEWSWEAK and uses that phrase without attributing it to his previous work, he could find himself in a bit of a legal bind. It sucks and it's a shame, but it is possible for authors to never have or loss rights to their own work.
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A Stone in My Shoe Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me? "For that which I love, I will do horrible things"
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