The Drawing Board

a journey in chronic pain

Mary Ann Farley

Mary Ann Farley
Location
Hoboken, New Jersey, USA
Birthday
January 18
Company
www.maryannfarley.com
Bio
In 1999, at the very same time I was diagnosed with a serious blood clotting disorder (Essential Thrombocythemia), I also felt my face explode in a type of pain that no one could explain. After 13 months, I finally learned that it was osteonecrosis of the jaw (also known as NICO), a complication of the blood/bone marrow illness. I've had untold numbers of surgeries during this time, having spent most of it in pain. In 2004, the blood condition caused an internal massive hemmorhage during which I lost 70% of my blood volume, which in turn made the jaw infection much worse. This blog will detail my journey with chronic pain and all of its accompanying complications and emotions. I'll try to be as honest as possible without shooting myself.

Mary Ann Farley's Links

Salon.com
APRIL 10, 2009 1:58PM

The OS Terms of Service Debate

Rate: 16 Flag

To my new OS pals:

When I signed up for OS, I didn't read the Terms of Service (TOS), but my friend Joe did and alerted me promptly. The language is downright scary! It basically says that everything we write is automatically licensed to OS, which OS can use as it sees fit, without pay and in perpetuity.

I've written so many essays about chronic pain on Blogger/OS that I could envision them as a collection at some point down the road.  Am I shooting myself in the foot by posting to OS? The TOS language is so vast, encompasses so much, that I wonder what future repercussions could be.

Let's say someone here becomes a famous novelist. Technically, OS would have the rights to use their blog in ways the novelist could never imagine and might not ever ordinarily agree to.

I'd hate to leave OS, or curtail my writings (they're what's giving meaning to my pain experience these days), but the TOS language is pretty freaky (particularly certain paragraphs in #7).

This link below is to a recent discussion on Dynomyte's blog about the matter. Any opinions?

http://open.salon.com/blog/dynomyte/2009/02/06/an_open_blog_on_being_open_on_open_salon_and_the_tos

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The important thing to get out of the TOS is that everything you write is copyrighted and owned by you. OS can use it, but if they sell, you would still get royalties. I think that the put in most of that language because they need to in case your post makes it to the cover and they have to think of a clever way to sum up your post. I have noticed that sometimes this is done very poorly and the language of the TOS protects them in those cases. I don't think that OS will turn your serious posts into comedy or anything like that though. There aren't enough employees to do anything like that !
You own your work from first rights to world wide rights. The TOS does state OS can use your work in a compilation or anthology is they so want to. I doubt this will happen. If you don't know, some of us bloggers are initiating a writer's group. This issue is being discussed. Contact OS blogger Larry Lawson for info (or pm me).
I showed the TOS to my daughter (a woman with a very expensive legal degree from Washington and Lee) and she dittos what Aaron and Mean Mr. Mustard say about who owns the rights (writes?).

I'm going to keep writing and posting here.
A ha, the jokes on them because nothing I write is worth publishing. Revenge is mine, bwa ha ha ha ha.
I appreciate the plug, thank you; and I'm glad to see this issue being brought out and discussed again. I think we'd all prefer to trust the current editors, but the language of the TOS is quite clear; and I doubt we can trust the attorneys. Nor can we really know the direction OS is headed; or who the editors might be a year from now; and when I look at the FP, I am not soothed by the promoted content, which seems to be getting more sensationalistic each day. I believe the most compelling thing about this issue is the fact that I repeatedly encouraged Kerry to comment publicly on my own blogs about the TOS, and he refused to do so (probably on orders from the attorneys) and he even sent me a PM and invited me to leave if I am unsatisfied with the way things are... (always an option). :)

I suggest caution and common sense. Personal and legal opinions offered here in comment are one thing, but the TOS is the bottom line.
Thanks for enlightening me - I cross post on my own (totally ignored) blog... I'm torn. I get readers here, and not there, and yet, I used to get paid for some of the stuff I've posted here... and would like to again (someday - in my dreams). Will check out the link you've offered. It's not a pretty world for the freelance writer these days.
Mary Ann:

I don't like the wording of the TOS but something similar is pretty common on any site that you write on. Facebook recently said that if you pull your stuff from there then it is gone and they can no longer use it.

That is NOT the case here or on a lot of other writing sites. Here you own it but even if you pull all of your stuff they can use anything in the archive exactly as if you posted it today. They don't "throw away" your work, they store it.

I am not concerned because I am not trying to write The Great American Novel or anything like that. And even if I were, I am not sure that the publicity I might get, for example, by OS bragging that they "discovered" me, or them posting something about my "early works" would be harmful. It likely would enhance my reputation.

All I can say is that if you want to post something you need to think about the TOS and then do or don't post it depending on your risk level.

Monte
They should get someone in to rewrite the TOS on here. It's basically the same thing on Blogger (a Google service):
"By submitting, posting or displaying Content on or through Google services which are intended to be available to the members of the public, you grant Google a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free license to reproduce, publish and distribute such Content on Google services for the purpose of displaying and distributing Google services."
I'd be more concerned with the position of most editors - many won't consider content that has already been "published" - and that includes blog content.
Maybe they'd like to publish all of my rejection letters as well....
If you're not read, no one knows you. If your are read, and someone likes it, and wants to publish it, without giving you royalties, It's not fair. But, if they had not published it to start with!! This is a conundrum in a conundrum. Stay tuned.
I am glad that this has been cleared up. I would hate to see my fabulous stuff (hack, coff) out there making jillions while I live in penury.
I'm really glad you posted this.
I saw some of the wording in there, and it made me sad. One of my original intentions was to post portions of a script that might eventually perhaps be published and performed, but after reading the TOS, I didn't want to do that. My short stories are strictly for fun, but I wouldn't feel comfortable posting anything I thought would ever get published. A shame really.
If they want, OS could make mine into a movie, a really bad movie, straight to DVD movie and uh...never mind.

:)
Whoa Whoa. Google retains rights to it's own content. Here is the Google statement about our personal rights.

""""Your Intellectual Property Rights. Google claims no ownership or control over any Content submitted, posted or displayed by you on or through Google services. You or a third party licensor, as appropriate, retain all patent, trademark and copyright to any Content you submit, post or display on or through Google services and you are responsible for protecting those rights, as appropriate. By submitting, posting or displaying Content on or through Google services which are intended to be available to the members of the public, you grant Google a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free license to reproduce, publish and distribute such Content on Google services for the purpose of displaying and distributing Google services. Google furthermore reserves the right to refuse to accept, post, display or transmit any Content in its sole discretion.""""""

Source: Google Blogger TOS

http://www.blogger.com/terms.g
The difference in the Google language is that they're making it clear that anything they use from our Blogger blogs would be used only to promote Google.

That language is very different from OS TOS, where their language is far more sweeping, suggesting that they might do anthologies of OS in the future, which gets into publishing.

Google's language puts me at ease because it's so specific. OS's language, though, is spooky.
On rare occasion, I think the stuff I write may be worth publishing and I am troubled by the possibility of future plagiarism on a public forum like OS or Blogger.

More often I wonder if my material is even worth reading and I'm ecstatic when someone posts a comment on my blog.

Mostly I hope I am an evolving human and anything I write tomorrow will be better than what I posted today meaning that if my current writing was ever used without my essential consent, honestly, I'd be flattered and then probably motivated to knock out something better!
That's why I said that they should look into rewriting the TOS on here to make it clearer their intent.

Of course, what's to say that Google couldn't publish an anthology of content published on their sites to promote Google? As long as the anthology was branded with "Google" it would follow their TOS. I'm not saying they would do that, I'm just saying that even with their TOS language, it allows for that kind of user loop hole.
I don't freak out about it, but then I don't expect anyone to publish anything I do anyway.
Thanks for all these great points of view. For many years, I was a singer/songwriter, and lemme tell ya; the music business is absolutely treacherous, so maybe I'm just being a little paranoid. I'll continue to post, here and at Blogger, and enjoy myself. Sometimes ya just have to let go and let God.
I had wondered about this too. Thanks for the great discussion.
In typical Pirate fashion, I'm just going to continue to do what I do. In the unlikely event OS steals my work, I'll run em through with my Sabre.
In typical careful-writer fashion, most of what I post on OS is recycled. It's stuff I have already posted here, there or otherwise, in slightly altered versions. I am slightly disappointed though - that no one besides me seems to have thought my stuff worth plagiarizing, and I have been blogging for one website or another since 2002. Eh - as for the publishing? Go the wave of the future: POD. Just get yourself a good editor, first!
Sgt. Mom--I think the issue has less to do with plagiarism and more with future publishing rights.

Cap'n--Arghhhhh, yes matey--run 'em through!

And One--you're welcome! Again thanks to all for contributing to this discussion.
Having bought a few of Sgt Mom's books (she is an excellent writer), I know she means publish yourself first and then publish here for greater exposure. Any writer who is very very good might want to look into that. Some writers are here for more polishing and some of us, like me, are primarily readers and are mainly here to read and socialize. This is a very good site to see what people want to read as opposed to just what you want to write about. I would think, don't know, but would think that 1/2 of getting a book into print would be writing a story that will sell and that a publisher will buy. You can be a fabulously talented writer, but if your interest group is small, no publisher will want to make the investment, since they need to make money. Does that make any sense? Sorry, currently running on 3 hrs sleep and know that my coherency is proportional to my sleep.
I am so thrilled that anyone is reading my posts that I don't worry what OS would do with them. For years hardly anyone read my blogger blogs.