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AQuick-n-DirtyPrimeronPlagiarism,CopyrightandFairUse,andCitationsinaFictionalWork

by Candy Monday, January 21, 2008 at 12:50 AM

There’s been a lot of talk lately about the difference between plagiarism and copyright infringement, the issue of fair use, and what authors should and shouldn’t do when it comes to citing research in their works of fiction. A lot of bad information is being passed around, and a lot of conflation (TAKE A DRINK, BITCHES) between plagiarism and copyright infringement; there also seem to be mild panic outbreaks among some authors who appear to think we readers are going to stab at them with our Pitchforks of Plagiarism +5 if they don’t include detailed citations in their books.

As a petty pedant, the former drives me nuts; as a reader who is capable of utilizing common sense, the latter makes me shake my head with mild exasperation. And as you regulars already know, pedantry + exasperation = me blather long time. The first part of this article is going to be a detailed, largely fact-based discussion about definitions. The second is going to be what I, as a Reader of Moderately-Sized Brain, want to see from an author in terms of acceptable usage without acknowledgement, and acceptable usage with acknowledgement; that part is pretty much purely opinion-based.

Copyright Cake vs. Plagiarism Pie (and how to wield the Fair Use Fork)

As I’ve noted previously on this blog, copyright infringement and plagiarism are different beasts, though they occasionally interbreed and give birth to that Liger of the intellectual property universe: a copyright infringement case that actually involves plagiarism. Here are the key differences again, in more detail:

More,more,more!>
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Categories: But...that's not really about romance novelsCassie Edwards

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WeDidIt

by SB Sarah Friday, January 18, 2008 at 02:40 PM

As of 5:44pm Eastern Time, 18 January 2008, we have raised for Defenders of Wildlife and other animal charities around the world a grand total of:


$5,032.75 US

Way to go, Smart Bitch Readers!  And a big thank you to Nora Roberts, who is matching that total to $5,000.00, making the total raised in three days: $10,032.75.

And if you would like to contribute to the ferrets and other endangered wildlife, please feel free. You can also consider these Native American relief funds and charities, should you be interested in other giving opportunities:

Adopt A Native Elder - Charity Navigator Rating: Four Stars

First Nations Development Institute - Charity Navigator Rating: Three Stars

The Native American Heritage Association - Charity Navigator Rating: Four Stars

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NoraRobertsMatchingDonationProgramforDefendersofWildlife

by SB Sarah Wednesday, January 16, 2008 at 06:50 AM

Here at Smart Bitches, we’ve examined a slew of material since last Monday, from novels to anthropology texts to poems, and we’ve discussed authors, editors, publishers, writers, scientists, ethnographers, Native Americans, and of course, Bitches.

But as Paul Tolmé pointed out in his article in Newsweek, there’s one party that hasn’t gotten enough attention.

The ferrets.

Tolmé’s article about the black footed ferret focuses on the loss of their habitat, the prairie, and the programs working to bring them back from near extinction.

The black footed ferret is officially classified by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature as extinct in the wild, though breeding and repopulation programs have been successful. Defenders of Wildlife classifies the ferrets as an imperiled species

And then came this morning’s email: Nora Roberts has volunteered to match up to $5,000.00 USD any donations made by Smart Bitches readers to Defenders of Wildlife, a 501(c)3 nonprofit that works to preserve not just ferrets but endangered wildlife across the US, most particularly that species much loved by paranormal romance writers: the wolf.

Are you outside the US, but want to increase Nora’s gift? Please feel free to make a donation to the local wildlife charity of your choice.

To qualify your donation for Nora’s matching gift, please email me at sarah@smartbitchestrashybooks.com with a screen cap or PDF of your donation receipt. You can block out your personal deets if like. I’ll total up the collective donations and keep y’all appraised of the totals.

Smart Bitches, Trashy Books LLC, will kick off the donations with a $100 pledge. Nora’s offer to match expires 31 January 2008, so please get your donations in by then.

Updated to add: We have cleared $1000 $1500 $2200 $4900 in total Smart Bitch Reader donations. Way to go!

Updated 18 January 2008, 6:00 pm EST: WE have REACHED $5,000.00 - and then some. Way to go Bitches!

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“Textstripsemotion;writersputitback.”

by Candy Tuesday, January 15, 2008 at 01:32 PM

My good buddy Schwern runs geek2geek, a geekblog that, among other things, talks about how people communicate on-line, and how we resolve conflicts. (That site kind of grew out of the “How Not To Be an Asshole” section of his “How to be a Better Programmer” talk, and really, if nothing else, I love conferences like OSCON because the people giving talks get to use LOLCAT pictures and have the word ASSHOLE up on a giant display. But that’s neither here nor there.) At any rate, I’ve been greatly enjoying his series on how text lacks empathy, which deals with the perils of communicating on-line. I’ve been thinking a great deal about my on-line presence and my on-line voice in the past week or so--more than I normally do, that is--and Schwern hit on several points bang-on, points that I think help make sense of how people have interpreted the recent kerfuffling:

If you’re like me — and the name tag says I am — when you write you hear a little voice in your head. Maybe it’s telling you to shoot the President to impress Jodie Foster (I hear she’s into Prime Ministers now), but it’s probably just your own voice speaking what you’re writing. This is fine. The trouble comes when you forget that all the EMPHASIS and STRESS and WILD HAND GESTURES and FUNNY LOOKS that are going on in your head aren’t coming out on the page. We don’t think of them much when we speak, they tend to come naturally, so it’s all too easy to not realize when they’re missing.

Our tendency is to fill in voids with our own negative emotions. (...)

can’t fix a problem unless you know about it

That’s the problem: we don’t realize there’s a problem. And it’s a hard problem to see. Going from the voice in your head to text on the screen there is no indication that anything is lost. No censor bleeping out parts. No red pen crossing bits out. No “emotions missing” icon. The loss is silent. If you’re not looking for it, you’d never know it happened.

I don’t have anything especially profound to add here, because I haven’t had time to fully sort and categorize everything I think about this issue other than “Holy crap, dude’s just expressed a whole bunch of things I’ve observed but hadn’t bothered to document coherently.” Like I said in the comments to my post on Bad Taste, I want to find ways to--well, not change my voice, but to get it across more accurately. Feel free to take the ball and run with it in the comments. GO GO GO! *blows referee whistle*

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Ok.Iadmit:AtThisTime,IhavesomeGlee

by SB Sarah Sunday, January 13, 2008 at 07:38 AM

Throughout the whole Cassie Edwards internetasplosion, Candy and I have been accused of enjoying this. Nope, not really. It’s, no pun intended, serious business what we did.

But I have to admit, I’ve just had a huge giggle of glee: following the NY Times article, my mother in law looked up this here site and called Hubby with ALL kinds of questions about it. The highlight?

Hearing Hubby explain to my mother in law what “OMGWTFBBQ” is. That was one of the funniest conversations I’ve ever heard. And no, I don’t think she gets it.

Also: Note to those who have been having trouble commenting. It’s a consequence of traffic and having our site load balanced across nine servers (Thanks again Esosoft!). Your cookie gets placed on one server, then the next request you make of the server is handled by a different one, and the cookie is timed out or absent. Esosoft and Their Unbearably Awesome Tech Support Team have been working on it and it should be functional now. If you have problems, please asap. 

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