Re: Pulling fanfics from the internet - your opinions?
Posted: Sat Jul 24, 2010 12:45 pm
As annoying as it is, they still have the right to pull them down / choose who to give permission though... If they only want to be read by a selected few and avoid all kinds of flames, that's their right. They won't reach a broad audience, and will have problems growing as authors if they are bad writers, but it's still their right.
Besides, many-many-many AU fanfics in any fandom are, in fact, original works with the characters' names, so it's no surprising that just by changing a few details here and there, your story stands as a true novel. At least two of our very own Roswellians have done this. I remember when I read what RosDreide's story was about, I could clearly see who was Max, who was Michael, and Liz, and how the Antar background was there. But that's because I know it came from Roswell, so I can see the "source" fairly clearly in this "AU" presentation.
If I were to pick the book without previous knowledge I would probably go as far as getting a "Roswell vibe", and go with it
I'm dying to see how Patroclus76, who wrote The Roswellian Codex, made the changes for the story to stand on its own, though
He's the other one who turned his story -which was fairly canonish- into an original novel.
Unfortunately for me, I've also picked books that are as poorly written as the majority of fanfiction out there
But for those precious good stories and really good fanfic writers, I do hope they'll get publish some day. They deserve it, and we as readers deserve better books for our money.
You have to consider as well that just because you write fanfiction it doesn't mean you aren't any good, or that your ideas have no value if you rework them a little. If anyone wants to self-publish, you can go to http://www.createspace.com and have it done easy and cheap. No one has to know if you are any good, or if you have an established name on the fanfic world. Of course, if your book is bad, it won't sell too many copies or get good reviews... On the other hand, getting published by a real publisher it's an entire different thing, which we're not discussing here.
But, getting back to the topic, yes, I do believe they have the right to do what they want with their stories, being it delete them, translate them, change them into original works and being snobbish about it. I will probably never pick another story by the author who "burned" me, so it's the author's loss. One less reader for them.
Besides, many-many-many AU fanfics in any fandom are, in fact, original works with the characters' names, so it's no surprising that just by changing a few details here and there, your story stands as a true novel. At least two of our very own Roswellians have done this. I remember when I read what RosDreide's story was about, I could clearly see who was Max, who was Michael, and Liz, and how the Antar background was there. But that's because I know it came from Roswell, so I can see the "source" fairly clearly in this "AU" presentation.
If I were to pick the book without previous knowledge I would probably go as far as getting a "Roswell vibe", and go with it


Unfortunately for me, I've also picked books that are as poorly written as the majority of fanfiction out there

You have to consider as well that just because you write fanfiction it doesn't mean you aren't any good, or that your ideas have no value if you rework them a little. If anyone wants to self-publish, you can go to http://www.createspace.com and have it done easy and cheap. No one has to know if you are any good, or if you have an established name on the fanfic world. Of course, if your book is bad, it won't sell too many copies or get good reviews... On the other hand, getting published by a real publisher it's an entire different thing, which we're not discussing here.
But, getting back to the topic, yes, I do believe they have the right to do what they want with their stories, being it delete them, translate them, change them into original works and being snobbish about it. I will probably never pick another story by the author who "burned" me, so it's the author's loss. One less reader for them.