It's the first Wednesday of the month, so it's time for the Insecure writers Support Group.
The awesome co-hosts for the August 6 posting of the IWSG are Ronel Janse van Vuuren, Natalie Aguirre, Sarah - The Faux Fountain Pen, and Olga Godim.
This month's question is intriguing:
What is the most unethical practice in the publishing industry?
This question had me really scratching my head. There are any number of things I feel are not right or unethical about the way the publishing industry works, but which one do I think is the MOST unethical?
I mean, there are whole swathes of so-called publishers out there who charge exorbitant fees for things self-publishers can do themselves far more easily and cheaply, and often with better results. I'd consider that unethical.
There are also a lot of scammers out there, impersonating agents and publishers and film executives to prey on authors. It's hard enough being an author and dealing with endless rejections and the crises of self confidence that come with them, without adding in impersonators out to grab cash for junk services. Not to mention the false hope they give authors who might, even for a fleeting second, believe that someone is finally, actually taking notice of their work.
Then there's traditional publishing contracts that pay the author on the net profit for their books, not the gross profit. This means all costs are taken out of the royalties before anything gets paid to the author. And the author rarely, if ever, gets a breakdown of what those costs are, so they may receive nothing if the publisher decides to assign monetary value to things like social media posts as marketing expenses.
A new one is the use of AI in publishing. I think it's unethical for anyone to use AI and then claim the work as their own. It's not. The words the AI spits back at you are not yours; they're other people's words that have been tossed around and regurgitated in a different order. And if you use AI generated art in your cover design, you're taking legitimate work away from real artists in favour of a machine mashing together the work of multiple artists to create something that's likely not even half as good as something a human can do.
In a way, AI use is actually plagiarism. And that's definitely up there in the top five unethical publishing practices. Stealing someone else's work and passing it off as your own, is not, in any way, okay.
I also feel like asking anyone to work without getting paid for it is unethical. It's one of those things that happens all the time in all arts careers. You get asked to do your creative work for "the experience" or to get your foot in the door. I feel like that's unethical. It also devalues the work and work in the the arts is already valued far too little. For something that can give joy, explain complex ideas and issues in ways that can make them more easily understood, something that can bring people together and create community, the arts are not given enough credit.
Time to jump down off my soapbox... I get quite passionate about this, as you can probably tell.
What do you consider to be the most unethical publishing practices?