What are the rules to writing an eBook/book?
Posted Saturday, August 15, 2009 by admin
I am just wondering if I can put other companies/ websites in my book without their permission?>
what I mean is like listing them as a resource…..
It would be referring to them as a place you can go for something- listing them as a resource in a good way
Share and Enjoy:
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Posted in Books & Authors
As “colour”? Yes. For instance, it’s fine for your characters to drink Coke or go to Macdonalds for dinner.
It’s not fine for you to pass judgement on other companies in print. They can sue you for libel.
Oh!This is ever a latest and very much better question of the the.Thanks!!!
To write a book, first you have to think about in what kind of subjects do you want write on. when you got it then you have to write and think more and more. Keep trying to make good, literature and scientific topics.
You shouldn’t elevate your answers or writings.
When you have finished it then check its spellings and others.
Then you can a good writer by practice.
You can certainly put together an ebook with reviews or comments about various companies, and you don’t need their permission–Consumer Reports does this, and they’re not always complementary.
You don’t need permissions to write a restaurant guide, or a “Great Stores in This County” guide, or “terrific vacation spots,” or whatever. You can reference companies all you want, as long as you’re careful to indicate that this is YOU, not the company, making the recommendation.
The parts you have to be careful about:
1) Trademark law exists to prevent confusion about a company’s products. You have to make very clear that if you use a company’s logo to identify them, that you’re not associated with them, and you don’t want people to think they hired you to say (whatever you say) about them.
2) Libel/Slander: If you say things the company doesn’t like, you need to be absolutely certain they are *true* things. (In the US. In some countries, it can be libel even if it’s true, if it’s said with harmful intent.) Even if you’re saying what you think are “good things,” some companies might be unhappy with the attention it brings–for example, if you said that a particular nightclub was a “great place to get laid.” Make sure everything you say can be verified.