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Showing posts from February, 2024

Should you copyright your work? Yes or No?

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  Should you copyright your work? Yes or No? If you’ve written a book, a movie script or even a song, created an artistic drawing, painting, or produced a photograph you need to copyright your work immediately. Whether you produced fiction nonfiction poetry, a reference book or a textbook, you need to copyright your work. This would also include any photographs to which you plan to sell, you’ve created coding for a computer program, produced material for a website or online store, your artwork, technical drawings, you’ve recorded a song or created a sound recording, what about you’ve written a song, a screenplay or a script, feature film, documentary, animated film, television show, or video, you need to copyright your work. It’s pretty simple how to copywrite your work, go to the copyright office website using this link U.S. Copyright Office | U.S. Copyright Office ,   click on the tab that says registration and fill out the form. Pay your fee, it will tell you how to pay. Be read

Publishing Trends in 2024

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  Publishing Trends in 2024 The publishing industry is not wise nor is it important enough to consider trends that emerge each year. However. it does reshape the way books are sold and consumed by the public.    Now that we’re in 2024 let’s look at how publishing trends are going to redefine the new journey for authors this year.   The publishing industry is currently undergoing a transformation, embracing a more inclusive and diverse approach to voice and storytelling. Authors no longer have sole control over how their stories are presented; instead, publishers are taking the lead in determining the narrative direction. For instance, publishers now insist on incorporating gay sexual interactions for any depiction of intimacy, requiring main characters to be of black or interracial backgrounds regardless of the story's context. This shift aims to create a literary landscape that reflects the diverse tapestry of human experiences, even if it challenges an author's personal r