Do You Need to Copyright your Manuscript? Will it Prevent Book Piracy?

by Anne R. Allen


Should I pay to copyright my manuscript? 
Will a publisher or agent steal my plot from a query? 
How can I protect my ideas?

We get asked these questions a lot. Until recently, our standard answer was: "Stop worrying about it. Your work is automatically copyrighted as soon as you type it onto your hard drive."

People who are paranoid about the theft of an unpublished manuscript or who obsess about somebody "stealing their ideas" red-flag themselves as amateurs. 

American copyright laws passed in the early 1970s state that anything you write is automatically copyrighted as soon as you type it onto a page (or a hard drive.)


But even if you don't register your work with the government, it is fully copyrighted as soon as you write it down.

But once you register the copyright, unfortunately, you're setting yourself up as prey for scammy vanity presses. Victoria Strauss at Writer Beware warns that you should NOT register copyright for unpublished work. It's not only unnecessary, but:

"You may be solicited by questionable companies. Vanity publishers and dodgy literary agents have long used copyright registration lists (and magazine subscription lists) to troll for customers."

But How Do I Keep People from Stealing my Ideas?


I understand that plot theft tends to be on the minds of a lot of new writers. Most writers believe our ideas are unique and glorious.

We need to believe this or we'd never be able to push ourselves through the long, tough slog of actually crafting the ideas into readable prose.

But a raw idea isn't worth as much as we think. A lot of people over-inflate the value of a plot. These are usually people who don't understand the hard work involved in turning that plot idea into a book.

You run into these people at parties. They tell you they have a dynamite idea for your next book and if you just "write down the words", they'll split the profits with you 50/50.

Every writer meets up with this phenomenon at some point. The New Yorker has a spoof of one of these encounters in "Shouts and Murmurs" in this week's issue, "An Unsolicited Great Idea for Your Next Book" by Jacob Sager Weinstein. It's hilarious. Here's a quote:

"He had become a writer for the same reason anybody did: he was incapable of coming up with ideas of his own, and he longed for a lifetime of being given them at cocktail parties."

And a few years ago, Victoria Strauss wrote at Writer Beware about some guy who was trying to sell his plot idea on eBay for ten million dollars. 

"It can be compared to stories like Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Matrix, Indiana Jones…and will bring in endless fame and money to anyone who takes it." 

He's not the only starry-eyed doofus who has combined delusions of grandeur with total cluelessness about the effort required to actually write a novel or screenplay and then get it in front of the public.

In the thread of the same post at Writer Beware, children’s author Kathleen Duey talked about the unsolicited-plot-idea people who want to share the profits 50/50.

"Try that split on any other kind of business person," Duey wrote. "'I think that a colony on Mars would be awesome and I am willing to give a 50% share of all eventual proceeds to anyone who can make it happen.'"

She reminds us to run away before one of these idea-people get going, in case you ever write something similar by accident. Delusional folks can be scary. (I used that situation as a plot device in my comic mystery set at a small UK publishing house, Sherwood Ltd. On sale at Amazon this week. See below.)

Personally, when somebody approaches me with this "proposition," I say, "the going rate for ghostwriters is $50-$200 an hour. I don't provide that service, but I can get you a referral."

Thing is—most writers have plenty of story ideas of our own. Our biggest fear is not living long enough to write them all.

So why can't you copyright an idea?


Here's what the copyright law says (Section 102(b)) "In no case does copyright protection for an original work of authorship extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation, concept, principle or discovery, regardless of the form in which it is described, explained, illustrated or embodied in such work."

Ideas, systems, and concepts come under the laws for patents and trademarks, which usually don't apply to books. 

Copyrights only cover "original works of authorship" that the author puts into a tangible form (paper, hard drive, etc,) That is, it protects your book after it's written. No one can steal, reprint or profit from your written work without your consent.

So you can't protect the ideas or plot of your story.

But don't let that bother you too much.

Plots get recycled all the time, and nobody loses. A guy named William Shakespeare lifted every one of his plots from other writers. His history plays are mostly taken from Holinshed's Chronicles, and he even took storylines from other playwrights. He ripped off Plautus's Menaechmi to write The Comedy of Errors. And a few centuries later Rogers and Hart stole the same plot to write The Boys from Syracuse. 

And you know what? They were all wildly successful. Everybody won.

Can't I copyright my logline? 


Yes. You can copyright a logline (a one-sentence summary of a plot, usually used for screenplays) but all somebody has to do is alter a few words and it's not under the copyright, so that's pretty pointless. 

So what should you do?

You should write the most brilliant, heartfelt, personal version of that plot and polish it till it shines, then repeat the old saying:

"There are no new stories, just new ways of telling them."

Seriously. You may think you're the first person who ever thought of that storyline, but you probably aren't. Experts don’t agree on the exact number of narrative plots, but there aren’t many:


So the number seems to be shrinking, but everybody agrees it is finite.

But…What About Piracy?


However, there is another issue that has emerged with the rise of ebooks, blogs, and self-publishing: piracy of published books and blogs.

I'm having to deal with this myself. Last week I discovered the content of this blog—lifted in its entirety, all the way back to my first 200-word post in 2009—on a weird Portuguese site that offered two things: this blog and The Bible.

Yup, Ruth and me and the Word of God. Pretty much the same thing, right? Ha!

These pirates are as shameless as they are creepy.

We also contacted Google with a DMCA notice. More on that below. Also, I've discovered a new program that removes illegal content from Google. It's called  Blasty.  It's free while it's still in beta. We hope it will get rid of the blog pirate.


Ebook Counterfeiters 


Pirates find indie books an easy target. Independent authors without a big publishing house's staff of lawyers look like easy prey.

A few months ago some guy took a bunch of ebooks, pasted his own name on the covers over the authors' names (often not even obscuring the real author) and put his stolen versions on Amazon under his own name. I saw them on a Facebook group page. They looked ridiculous. But the guy must have made enough money siphoning off sales that it was worth his while.

Amazon took the phony books down after a bunch of complaints, but there are thousands of other slightly less lazy pirates out there stealing ebooks right now.

In fact ebook theft seems to be getting worse by the day, as author John Doppler reported in a blogpost titled Kindle Counterfeiting in August.

Erotica authors seem to be the most common targets. Pirates will download books that are on a freebie run, change the title and author name, and upload them to Amazon as their own.

Amazon works hard to fight this kind of piracy, and they will work with the author if you report the theft. There will be a paper trail if Amazon paid royalties to the pirates. Sometimes you can even get the royalties back, according to Mr. Doppler.

Unfortunately registering the book with the copyright office will not do much to deter this kind of pirate. Copyright registration is only useful if you take these people to court, which isn't easy when the pirates are working out of some cafe in Sri Lanka or Bangladesh.

Update


I've just heard of a whole new type of plagiarism I wasn't aware of. There are people who will steal an author's book, change the names of the characters (and sometimes their gender) and rewrite a few phrases per page, then publish the novel as their own work. It's especially happening to romance writers. 

Apparently one "author" has even been taking bestselling straight romances, changing them to m/m romances with a few tweaks and making quite a career of it. There's more about this on Jenny Trout's blog, Trout Nation.

As soon as the plagiarism was reported to retail sites, the stolen books were taken down. But that's just one person who was caught. I'm sure there are more out there. Since m/m and straight romances generally have different audiences, people have been getting away with this kind of book theft for a while. 

Torrent Pirate Sites


We also have the problem of "torrent" sites. (These are sites that use a protocol called "BitTorrent" for free file sharing.)

These sites seem to be offering your books for free, but they often only deliver the "look inside" 10% of the book that's already offered free on Amazon. This is because they don't actually want to make money off stolen books.

They use the "free" books to install malware on the users' electronic devices.

Of course, some illegal file-sharers steal your stuff just because they think everything should be free and artists don't deserve to be paid. These people have been ripping off musical artists ever since the Internet began, and the practice has spilled into ebooks.

Sometimes the pirates don't even have malevolent intentions. In many parts of the world, readers can't access legitimate ebook stores. Amazon blocks users in most of the African continent, the Middle East and much of Asia.

Torrent sites are the only way readers in those places can access your ebooks unless you get on local sites in their countries through aggregators like Smashwords, D2D and BookBaby.

As Neil Young said several years ago, "piracy is how music gets around these days." Now piracy is the way ebooks get around. Especially in Asia and Africa.

We probably don't need to freak out all that much about that kind of piracy. We know freebie runs and perma-free books help build a fan base. Think of these Asian and African pirate sites as a way to build your audience in countries where your book isn't sold yet... and when your book comes out in translation, or on a legit site, you'll have a fan base.

Fighting Piracy and Counterfeiters


But in general, content theft is a growing problem, and counterfeiting of the kind Mr. Doppler talked about—your own book sold by someone else on a major retail site—can really cut into an author's bottom line.

Newer laws have been passed to try to curb intellectual property theft, but they don't always do much good.

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) was passed in the 1990s to deal with copyright infringement on the Internet. If you find material online that infringes a copyright you hold—whether that copyright has been officially registered or not—you can send the hosting website a DMCA notice. When the hosting website gets it, it MUST remove the material and notify the person who posted it.

Unfortunately, pirates know how to game the law to steal an author's work and there's often not much we can do about it.

However, if you are wealthy enough to hire an attorney, you can file a lawsuit. And to file a lawsuit—as opposed to a DMCA notice—you do need to have registered the copyright.

Intellectual property attorney Helen Sedwick has a step-by-step how-to on her blog telling us how to deal with content theft..

She thinks you SHOULD copyright your book in order to fight the pirates. 

Sedwick says, "You cannot file a lawsuit unless the work is registered with the US Copyright Office. If you threaten to sue, and the infringer searches copyright records and doesn't find your registration, they may call your bluff." For more on how to register your copyright, see Joel Friedlander's post How to Copyright Your Book.

But another intellectual property attorney, Kathryn Goldman, doesn't think an individual author has much of a chance with a lawsuit. She addressed the problem on Molly Greene's blog in a 2-part piece called "Has Your Ebook Been Pirated?"

She says your best way to deal with pirates is contact Google with your DMCA notice to downrank their site so people won't find it when searching for your book.

"…if you find your book on a torrent site, you can file a Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) removal request with Google and other search engines. Here is Google’s DMCA form. If Google receives a sufficient number of takedown requests for a particular site, their new algorithm may downrank the torrent site in search engine results pages."

She says, "Suppressing search result rankings may be the best option for an individual author with respect to the problem of work appearing on illegal torrent sites."

Does Registering your Copyright Protect you from Pirates?


Unfortunately US copyright laws don't help much against pirates unless 1) you have the money for a pricey court battle, 2) the pirates are under the jurisdiction of US laws.

Here's the thing: US copyright registration doesn’t do much to fight elusive third-world pirate sites. And it doesn't always hold weight with Amazon, who will take your book down if anybody claims to have written it—even if you have the registered copyright. At least that's what happened to author Becca Mills when a pirate sent a DMCA on her own copyrighted book, which was discussed on The Passive Voice blog in March of 2015.

Amazon took it down and refused to put it back. They considered this a "dispute between private parties" even though Becca Mills didn't even know the identity of the person who sent the DMCA and she had registered the copyright.

Other Ways to Fight the Theft of Ebooks.


If the pirates are reselling your books on Amazon, follow these steps outlined by Jon Doppler


He says you shouldn't bother contacting customer service for copyright issues; go directly to the legal department. Amazon provides an online form for filing a copyright infringement notice, or you can email your own DMCA notice to Amazon’s legal department, via copyright @ amazon.com.

What Should You Do to Protect Yourself?


For Self-Publishers:

For unpublished authors planning to go the traditional route:


What about you, scriveners? Have you ever been approached by somebody who wanted to sell you their idea? Have you ever worried about plot theft? Have you had a book pirated? What did you do? Did it work? 

BOOK OF THE WEEK


 Sherwood Ltd. is only 99c this week on all the Amazons!
also available at its regular price at
iTunesInkteraNook, and Smashwords
And in paper for $11.99 from Amazon and Barnes and Noble

Follow Camilla's hilarious misadventures with merry band of outlaw indie publishers in the English Midlands. Always a magnet for murder, mischief and Mr. Wrong, Camilla falls for a self-styled Robin Hood who may or may not be trying to kill her. It follows Ghostwriters in the Sky, but can be read as a stand-alone. 




"It's an hilarious lampoon of crime fiction, publishing and the British in general....Whether you enjoy crime suspense, comedy or satire - or all of them together - you'll have enormous fun with this cleverly structured romp. Highly recommended!"...Dr. John Yeoman

"Ms. Allen...has crafted a wily tale of murder, deceit, and intrigue that can stand with the best of them. Her characters are all too real and her dialogue took me from laughter to chills to suspicion of everybody in the book...This was obviously written by an intelligent woman who is also a fine story-teller."...David H. Keith

OPPORTUNITY ALERTS



The Poisoned Pencil: The well-known mystery publisher The Poisoned Pen now has a YA imprint. They accept unagented manuscripts and offer an advance of $1000. Submit through their website submissions manager. Response time is 4-6 weeks.

Open call for the Independent Women Anthology: short stories (flash fiction included), poetry, essays, artwork, or any other woman and/or feminist-centered creative work. 10,000 word max. All genres but explicit erotica. $100 per short story, $50 for flash, poetry, and photography/artwork. All profits will be donated to the Pixel Project Charity to end Violence Against Women. Deadline January 31, 2016 with a goal of publication on International Women's Day, March 8, 2016.

TETHERED BY LETTERS' FALL 2015 LITERARY CONTEST ENTRY FEES: $7-$15 Short Story; $7 Flash Fiction/$15 three Flash Fictions; $7 poem /$15 for three poems. Currently accepting submissions for the short story contest (1,000 to 7,500 words, open genre), flash fiction contest (55, 250, or 500 words), and poetry contest (maximum of three pages per poem). All winners will be published in F(r)iction. All finalists will receive free professional edits on their submission and be considered for later publication. The prizes are $500 (USD) for the short story winner, $150 (USD) for the flash fiction winner, and $150 (USD) for the poetry winner. Multiple entries accepted. International submissions welcome. Deadline December 1.

The Ernest Hemingway Flash Fiction Contest. $10 fee Unpublished fiction. 1500 words or less. Simultaneous submissions ARE welcome. All entries will be considered for publication in Fiction Southeast. (a prestigious journal that has published people like Joyce Carol Oates) Winner gets $200 and publication. Deadline: Dec. 1st

Writers' Village International Short Fiction Award winter 2015. Cash prizes totaling $3200.Ten further Highly Commended entrants will have their stories acknowledged at the site and gain a free entry in the next round. Entry fee $24 INCLUDES A PROFESSIONAL CRITIQUE. Any genre of prose fiction may be submitted up to 3000 words, except plays and poetry. Entries are welcomed worldwide. Multiple entries are permitted. Deadline: November 30th.

The IWSG Short Story Anthology Contest 2015
. NO FEE! The top ten stories will be published in an anthology. (Authors will receive royalties on sales.) Eligibility: Any member of the Insecure Writer's Support Group is encouraged to enter – blogging or Facebook member (no fee to join the IWSG). The story must be previously unpublished. Entry is free. Word count: 5000-6000. Theme: Alternate History/Parallel Universe. Deadline: November 1st

MASTERS REVIEW FALL FICTION CONTEST $20 ENTRY FEE. 7000 word limit.The winning story will receive $2,000 and publication on the site. Second and third place stories will receive $200 and $100, publication, and all story winners will receive a critique. Fifteen finalists will be recognized online and have their stories read by the VanderMeers. Deadline October 31.

Fuse Literary Agency's Christmas Romance Charity Anthology: NO FEE! Short Romance Fiction 5000-8000 words. They're donating 100% of the profits to the UNHCR, the UN agency leading and coordinating international action to protect Syrian refugees. Non-exclusive rights to your story, so you’re 100% free to publish it elsewhere if you’d like. If your story is accepted, you will receive a single, up-front payment of $10, They want steamy, winter-holiday-themed romance. Deadline October 31.

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