A too-familiar story: one freelancer’s run-in with plagiarism

6 comments

  • While legal action may be expensive, it might be worth sending an invoice for unauthorized use. I’ve done that on the few occasions when I’ve found my work used without my permission. For unauthorized use, I charge three times the normal rate for usage rights and usually offer to license the work for an extended period (so that the infringing publisher has a chance to get the value paid for, through authorized use). So far, I have always received a cheque in the mail, but have never had anyone take me up on the license offer. Even if they don’t send payment, the effort on my part was minimal. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.

  • That’s an *excellent* approach. It also puts the offending party on notice that people do keep track of this sort of thing.

    It’s worth Googling the headline, or a line or two, of your work from time to time. It can be useful in terms of finding out whether anyone is quoting your material – which may lead to more work! – or ripping you off.

  • Quick update: as suggested, I invoiced eBizDocs, giving them 10 days to pay and a PayPal payment option via Freshbooks.

    Not sure what’ll happen, but as Darrell Noakes wisely wrote above: “Even if they don’t send payment, the effort on my part was minimal. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.”

    BTW, Darrell, no plagiarism meant with the above quote 😉

  • Another update:

    The day AFTER I sent the invoice, counsel for eBizDocs contacted the editor at the Lawyers Weekly to see about setting things right.

    Today, they asked for (and the editor sent) the correction notice to be posted on the eBixDocs website.

    They’re also trying to ascertain whether I have copyright, likely to figure out whether I’m within my rights to invoice eBizDocs. Stay tuned on that one.

  • Oh well… no reply and no money from eBizDocs.

    I doubt this is worth pursuing, so I’ll chalk it up to a company not wanting to do the right thing and pay a relatively minimal (3-figure) invoice for several weeks of unauthorized use and a blatant act of plagiarism. And I’ll move on.

    That said, I wonder if this blog post will live on and perhaps one day come back to dog eBizDocs…

    In case you’re wondering, I don’t believe in exacting a pound of flesh – you can’t take a pound of flesh to the bank.

  • Just ran across a neat article and thought I’d post it here:

    How To Use Content From Other Blogs Without Violating Copyright

    http://socialfresh.com/how-to-use-content-from-other-blogs-without-infringing-on-their-copyright/

    Sure, this case deals with online content, but this article’s tenets apply just as well.

    Here’s the bit that struck me:

    “Lawsuits — The way you really need to think about copying the original work of another person is, will they sue you? If you are worried about the potential of a lawsuit, then you likely should not copy the content without direct permission. Even if you are in the right, but you piss off the wrong entity, you may still have to pay significant legal fees. Think about whether you have that freedom or not.”

    I doubt the plagiarizer in this case was worried about a lawsuit… and to avoid problems, all the plagiarizer had to do was take down the plagiarized post… which is what happened.

Leave a Reply