There are 14 different steps discussed in this post on How to Self-Publish Your Book on a Budget | Mediashift | PBS.
Tag Archives: self-publishing
Kobo and WH Smith overreact to the porn titles in their catalogs | Dear Author
RELATED: WH Smith takes website offline after porn e-book scandal | BBC News
Here’s another perspective of the situation from Dear Author.
Full Article
Yesterday, Kobo pulled all the content from the distributor Draft 2 Digital in response to the complaints retailers were receiving about the incest and beastiality books being self published. Authors refer to this content as Psuedo Incest because it is really about step brothers and step fathers, not blood relatives, but because Daddy PI was showing up in the children’s literature section, WH Smith went to the drastic step of shutting down its website (which is likely costing them thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars a day) and Kobo pulled all the D2D content. Much of the D2D content is not “porn” but YA, sweet romance, and the like.
Part of the problem is that authors who are writing PI stuff will relabel their content in order to get around the filters. I think the extreme reaction is due to a few authors trying to mess with the system and reducing the efficacy of filters. For instance, authors would change the title of their book to get through the filter but the cover would have a different title – one that is disallowed. Authors would use the names of famous authors in their tags or descriptions so that the books would show up when someone was searching for other things. I can’t tell you how irksome it was that one author’s porn books kept showing up when I was trying to compile a new release list for “Forever Romance.”
Other authors were putting up excerpts in the description area that were full on sex scenes.
At Kobo, their search function is even worse. Search a middle grade author name and a bunch of porn titles show up because Kobo can’t get its search feature to work correctly.
What is clear is that Direct 2 Digital uses no filters unlike Smashwords. None of the Smashwords titles were taken down but the ones from D2D were, likely because D2D had no way of filtering out the questionable content.
There’s been a great deal of panic and accusations flying but the actions appear to be taken primarily by Kobo and WH Smith. For now, it appears the following is true:
- Kobo is removing self published content in addition to the Draft 2 Digital stuff. If a book was part of an indie consortium that Kobo doesn’t like, then the whole consortium’s books were removed. No update as to when this will be resolved.
- No content has been removed from any reader’s Kindle. Lots of readers seem to be in a tizzy about this but I have seen zero evidence of this. – Indie authors have been whispering this into indie bloggers’ ears and it was all over facebook last night. Removing content from the store (or in Amazon’s case, putting the content into draft status) is not the same thing as taking stuff away from your Kindle account. Amazon won’t even remove plagiarized crap from your Kindle account. Seriously I had to restrain myself from using allcaps all over the Internet yesterday and it wasn’t easy.
- Amazon is not going to war against self published erotica. Given that the dino porn is still up as is tons of other porn, the evidence is strongly against any war against indies and/or erotica. What they don’t want is a bunch of in your face incest, rape and child porn stuff showing up in regular searches but when authors keep trying to futz with the filter, the banhammer comes down hard and broad. They appear to be putting any erotica author’s work into draft if it contains “sister, brother, child, babysitter, daddy, mother” and the like. The author will then have to go back to Amazon and republish the work. Some authors reported that working within hours while others were still being vetted.
- Amazon is going through and putting authors’ titles to “draft” status which means that the content isn’t deleted, but rather it can’t be purchased until Amazon determines that the content doesn’t violate its anti porn clause (which it selectively enforces).
- Authors having their content removed is a bigger deal than readers having their content removed. Or do Kobo and other retailers not have the right to enforce their content policies just like Goodreads? Or is somehow constraining commercial speech and the sale of porn more concerning than critical speech?
Anyway, I digress. Enough people complained and media sat up and now the retailers are doing something. Does this mean that the content is never coming back? Doubtful. Right now it means that Amazon and Kobo are vetting content that they pulled which is likely going to take a really long time.
via Tuesday News: Kobo and WH Smith overreact to the porn titles in their catalogs | Dear Author
25 Independent Presses That Prove This Is the Golden Age of Indie Publishing | Flavorwire
Independent publishing — that is, publishing whatever an individual or small group think is worthy of dumping their time and money into — is nothing new. From Virginia and Leonard Woolf starting up Hogarth Press to the early days of Farrar, Straus and Giroux championing now-iconic authors that other publishers wouldn’t touch, DIY publishing has long been responsible for some of our best literature.
That’s why, no matter what the latest doomsday prognostication about the future of big publishing happens to be, this is an exciting time to be a fan of literature. Among the long list of indie presses that are putting out great stuff, we’re singling out 25 that we love — but we encourage you to do some more digging of your own to discover even more great indies that are publishing great works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, translated literature, and more.
Read: 25 Independent Presses That Prove This Is the Golden Age of Indie Publishing | Flavorwire.
Design And Print Your Own Moleskines With Paper’s New “Book” | Co.Design
Paper is an amazing iPad app–and one of our Innovation By Design nominees–because its team at FiftyThree cracked the code of making creation a simple, beautiful experience on tablets. There’s just one problem: Paper isn’t actually paper; it’s a screen.
Today, FiftyThree and Moleskine are revealing a solution called Book. For $40, you will be able to turn your Paper sketches into a custom Moleskine print. The 15-page, accordion-style, handmade “Book” marks the first time that the iconic Moleskine has ever allowed cover customization. It’s also a potential peek into the future strategy of FiftyThree, a company that hasn’t been shy about their plan to expand their purview into a whole suite of creative productivity apps.
Read: Design And Print Your Own Moleskines With Paper’s New “Book” | Co.Design | business + design.
Create Your Own Magazines with Flipboard | Screencast Tutorial – The Digital Shift
Now anyone can create a beautiful digital zine of customized content, thanks to Flipboard. In a highly touted new feature, version 2.0 of the iconic newsstand app allows users to tap and select articles, photos, and video they find on Flipboard to create magazines on any interest or topic.
via Create Your Own Magazines with Flipboard | Screencast Tutorial – The Digital Shift, April 23, 2013
See also:
Flipboard update turns readers into magazine publishers | CNET
Do Fans Really Own Fan Fiction? – Noah Berlatsky – The Atlantic
Amazon’s bid to make money off of independent works based on corporately owned entertainment calls into question how independent those works really ever were.
via Do Fans Really Own Fan Fiction? – Noah Berlatsky – The Atlantic
You may also like:
Amazon Launches Fan Fiction Platform | PopWatch | EW.com – The Modern MLIS
Amazon Launches Fan Fiction Platform | PopWatch | EW.com
Amazon is readying the launch of a new publishing platform called Kindle Worlds where writers will be able to publish and earn royalties from their fanfiction.
For now, fanfic writers are limited to submitting stories about only three TV shows: ABC Family’s Pretty Little Liars, the CW’s Vampire Diaries and Gossip Girl, which aired its series finale on the CW last December. Amazon Publishing has secured licenses for those three properties (all owned by Warner Bros.), though it expects to announce more licenses soon.
Most stories on the publishing platform will be priced between $0.99 and $3.99. More details about submission rules and royalty rates are on Amazon.com. Via ‘Vampire Diaries’ among shows licensed for Amazon fan fic platform | PopWatch | EW.com.
Collection of Links: eBooks
I find it challenging to keep up with eBook news and resources, since it seems there are updates on an almost daily basis. I have provided links to the most informative and newsworthy below.
eBooks & Publishing
- Inkling Takes Dead Aim At Apple And Amazon With New Google Search-Friendly Digital Publishing Tools | TechCrunch
- Inkling takes on Amazon, Apple with new e-book publishing tool | CNet
- Apple and Amazon File Patents to Sell Used eBooks | Good EReader
- Apple adds Breakout Books to the iBookstore to spotlight the self-published | Engadget
- 3 Ways to Create and Publish Your Own eBook | iLibrarian
eBooks, Libraries & Publishers
- Streaming Ebooks: A New Distribution Model for Schools | Digital Book World
- Ebooks are actually not books—schools among first to realize | Digital Book World
- Penguin Revisits Library Pilot Terms | American Libraries Magazine
- The book industry wars continue: First-Sale, DRM, and publisher self-destruction | Bibliographic Wilderness
- New scorecard lets libraries give feedback on e-book offerings from publishers | Stephen’s Lighthouse
- Ebook Trends 2013—The New World of Ebook Publishing | Stephen’s Lighthouse
- The Wrong War Over eBooks: Publishers Vs. Libraries | iLibrarian
- Six Essential Issues in Any Ebook Contract Negotiation | iLibrarian
Scientists Seek New Credibility Outside of Established Journals – The Digital Shift
“That’s the theory behind academia.edu, a social media-inspired platform that allows research scientists and other academic professionals to critique and collaborate on research. Since its founding in the fall of 2008, the site has attracted almost 2 million members (including a growing community of librarians), 1.7 million papers, and 3.9 million unique visitors per month.”
via Scientists Seek New Credibility Outside of Established Journals – The Digital Shift.
Auto-Graphics Adds Self-Publishing Tool to Library Software – The Digital Shift
“Auto-Graphics is rolling self-publishing software from FastPencil into its library management platform.”
via Auto-Graphics Adds Self-Publishing Tool to Library Software – The Digital Shift.
