NCS Division Awards — Call for entries
The National Cartoonists Society has released its call for entries.
Here’s what you need to know:
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The National Cartoonists Society has released its call for entries.
Here’s what you need to know:
The content you are trying to access is only available to members.
You don’t need a subscription to read today’s post!
This is a re-post from the Webcomics.com archive. If you’ve ever been curious about the kind of information, tutorials and advice that you’ll get as part of your subscription to Webcomics.com, this is a good example.
If you’d like to join the site, you can get a 12-month subscription for $30 — or you can get a one-month Trial for $5 … with no obligation after your 30 days expire. For less than three bucks a month, you can get a steady flow of information, tutorials and advice targeted towards your webcomic business — plus a private forum to discuss issues with other professionally minded cartoonists.
It happens regularly. An artist is outraged because someone stole their design! And when I click over, I see the design in question is a mash-up between two licensed properties that this person couldn’t possibly have the rights to. In other words, they’re complaining that someone stole the design that they stole.
And I always see the same justifications:
It’s Fair Use (or parody)!
and
I’m not making any money (or very little) off this!
Wrong, and wrong.
So let’s take a moment to understand Intellectual Property a little better.
First of all, Fair Use has a very clear legal definition. To qualify for “Fair Use” protection, you’d have to prove that the central point of your piece was to make a comment (satire or parody) on the IP — or your work was done in the pursuit of other goals (such as research, education and reporting the news).
So a newspaper can run a photo of Han Solo next to a story about Star Wars: The Force Awakens. That’s allowed under the pursuit of reporting the news. And Saturday Night Live can do a parody of the movie — because that satire makes a comment on the original work.
But a comic that mashes up Han Solo with a muppet — including a clever pun? That’s not commenting on either the Star Wars IP nor the Muppet IP (owned by Disney).
And when you offer that T-shirt for sale, your potential buyers are dominated by two groups — those who are interested in the Star Wars characters and those interested in Muppets.
In fact, if that T-shirt was to start to earn any serious amount of money, those original IP-holders could easily ask for a share. And their case would be easily proved. They’d say… “Hey… would anybody have bought this shirt this if it weren’t for the copyrighted characters?” The answer would be obvious. Burden-of-proof carried.
Very few of those T-shirt buyers are truly there for your work.
Wanna test that theory? Try marketing a few shirts that don’t trample the IP of others. It can be a bracing (and somewhat demoralizing) measurement of just how much you’re really bringing to the table.
The fact that you’re not making huge profits does not absolve you of copyright compliance. This is the example I use in my Entrepreneurship class at Hussian College: Let’s say you create an image to sell on a T-shirt. You’ve copyrighted that image, and it’s a part of your business. Now I come along, swipe that image, put it on a bunch of T-shirts, and I distribute my shirts to anyone who wants one — for free. You, as the creator of the original image would — rightfully — sue me for copyright infringement on the basis that I’ve harmed your ability to sell shirts by flooding the market with free ones. And you would likely win. And because you could prove monetary damages, I’d be in some serious trouble.
Which makes it all the more entertaining when someone rushes to social media to report that their mash-up T-shirt has been copied by someone else. They’re in the morally shaky ground of having to defend a work that they simply don’t have the rights to. How can you claim someone stole something that was never yours to begin with?
Sure they are… until, eventually, they rise on the radar of the IP-rights-holder. If the IP-owners decide to exercise their rights, they have plenty of legal grounds to shut the operation down.
The real danger of treading on the IP of others is simply this: Time wasted can never be restored. The time you’re pumping into IP mash-ups should be time you’re working to build your own IP — so that one day, you actually do bring a legitimate audience to a product. Worse yet, what happens when you get known as the mash-up guy or the mash-up girl? What happens when you try to do something that falls outside of that sphere? Will your audience join you in that new direction? Or will you find out, once and for all, that you don’t have the droids they’re looking for?
As I mentioned before, ad revenue tends to plummet in the first part of the year. Most businesses are reassessing their budgets in the first quarter, and most of them habitually cut back on spending until those budgets are cleared. It’s especially noticeable coming after November and December, when ad budgets are ablaze with holiday-shopping promotion. It’s a steep drop that puts me into an annual panic.
And right around now, you’re probably getting “helpful advice” from your ad networks, like this…
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Award season is upon us. Although I’ll be featuring a post with the details of each as it is announced, here’s a look at some of the awards you may want to start preparing for. For more information on any of these awards, feel free to use the Search function on this site to look up nomination/submission instructions from past years. They’re usually the same from year to year (except for the deadline dates, of course).
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This is the perfect time to get organized for a successful year in webcomics.
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We all make resolutions this time of year. Sure, most of us forget about them by February, but it’s useful to set goals at a time like this. It helps to focus our attention on those areas that we know we need to work on. Here are ten resolutions I think you should consider if you’d like to do a better webcomic in 2017.
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This is a time that many of us start daydreaming about the coming year. We have hopes, plans, goals, and dreams. We have so much we want to accomplish. And yet, it’s going to seem like this year — like the one before it — will whoosh past us, leaving so much stuff left undone. And there we’ll be, the following December, daydreaming goals for the next year.
The fact is, our lives are too complicated to rely on goals alone. After all, daydreams take a back seat to day jobs every time. Throw in family life and personal issues, and it’s a wonder wo accomplish anything at all!
So, as you’re looking ahead to 2017, here’s a suggestion that can help you actually achieve some of those goals — even the lofty ones — that hover on the horizon.
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I got an Instant Message on Facebook today:
Maybe quitting my Webcomic
Sorry to bother u
Just to say thanks for the support
Yup, it’s that time again. Many of us are reaching the end of the year, and taking a long, hard look at whether we should be continuing in the following year. And that brings a heavy dollop of grief… and feelings of failure.
As if the holidays weren’t challenge enough.
We had a really good discussion, and since I think it applies to many of us, I got permission to share it here.
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If you break your stories down into chapters — to make it easier for your readers to jump in at different entry points — you may get to the point that the sheer number of chapters you’re offering makes updating your comic cumbersome. Here’s a Pro Tip to make it easier.
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Taking a page from my own book, I decided to have a look at the top 10 most popular posts from the past year. Based on pageviews, these were the most popular posts from the past year.
Five writing mistakes webcartoonists make… and how to avoid them