Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

Watch out Amazon and Kobo, Google wants its slice of Canada's ebook retail market.

Google's eBookstore is now open to Canadian customers, offering hundreds of thousands of books for sale and upwards of 2 million free public-domain titles.

Google has already struck deals with Canadian publishers big (Penguin, Random House, and Harper Collins) and small (Douglas & McIntyre, House of Anansi Press, and Dundurn) and hopes to partner with independent book retailers here, allowing them to sell books through the eBookstore for a cut of the profits.

How Google treats Canadian authors, publishers, and retailers will be worth tracking, though. The company is currently involved in legal disputes with the Association of American Publishers and the Authors Guild over its Google Library project, for which it digitized millions of books. The organizations claimed Google was sharing copyrighted material and failed to properly compensate writers and publishers. They reached a deal in 2008, but earlier this year a judge rejected it. The settlement administration website for the Authors Guild's suit indicates that it has been stalled since March.

EBookstore content is readable on Android smartphone and tablets, Apple's iPads and iPhones, and on Kobo, Sony's E-Reader, and Nook devices, as well as on personal computers (see the full list of supported devices). Notably, books purchased from the eBookstore are not readable on Amazon's Kindle devices, though Google says they are "open to supporting them in the future."

Kindle Direct Publishing has quickly become a popular platform for authors to promote and sell their own work. Whether it's used to publish full-length books or Singles, KDP lets authors bypass traditional publishing channels and market their writing directly, up to and including setting their own prices. But in KDP's fine print is a clause that…
Canadian author alleges publisher and U.K. writer stole idea for children's book [caption id="attachment_2093" align="alignnone" width="580" caption="Covers of the book published by Scholastic (left) and Carruthers' self-published book."][/caption]We recently shared the story of a freelancer who suspected a profile idea she had pitched was…
Yesterday in Ottawa, Minister of Canadian Heritage and Official Languages James Moore and Minister of Industry and Minister of State (Agriculture) Christian Paradis spoke to the media about their plan to fast-track Bill C-11, the Copyright Modernization Act, and have it passed by the end of the year. The act is, according to many, a long overdue…
Being able to slap whatever price tag you want on your own work is one of the most freeing things about self-publishing, but it can also be the most challenging. Not all writers are marketing experts, and, as far as we know, a guide on How to Compete in the E-books Marketplace — with its various publishers and platforms and e-stores — has yet…
In April, the Canadian Writers Group announced it had become the official Content Sponsor for the Registered Graphic Designers of Ontario. We told you about the agency's ambitions to get its writers on the Ontario design community's radar, producing content for DesignThinkers 2011 and for RGD’s professional development and training activities…
[caption id="attachment_1047" align="aligncenter" width="580" caption="Screengrab from Rue Frontenac's front page, May 19, 2011."][/caption] Rue Frontenac launched in winter 2009 as website for locked-out workers at the Journal de Montreal, offering union information on the conflict between the paper and its unionized workers that began in…
Freelancers have perhaps always known more about the business of journalism than their permanently employed counterparts. But now, at least according to an extensive report from the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, all journalists need to educate themselves about where their pay cheques are coming from.This story about the…
For better or worse, the ongoing series of "Robertson v. _____" cases continues. On May 2, a final decision was handed down in the case of "Robertson v. Proquest, Cedrom, Toronto Star Newspapers, Rogers and Canwest." (This decision comes after a tentative settlement reached this January.) Heather Robertson and Kirk Baert of the firm Koskie Minsky…
Content farming, as a web-based business model, is going through a tough time. Increased scrutiny from media critics and frustrated web users is targeting sites like Mahalo, which had to significantly decrease its staff after Google made its algorithm change, and the various online properties owned by Demand Media. Some people also include the…

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