Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

Imagine if, to sell your writing or other media work, you had to give up all re-sale rights, knowing full well that the person you were selling it to would earn far more than you had because of their access to a wider market. If what you're producing is one-of-a-kind, nearly impossible to re-create, and took years of work, it's a maddening prospect.

To make any money from their work, visual artists have to release it to the market. After that first sale, though, Canadian artists don't see a penny more of profit. Works that originally sold for hundreds of dollars can fetch thousands once they reach auction houses, but the artist can only watch and hope they can sell new pieces for more.

It isn't this way everywhere. As this CBC story notes, 59 countries have legislation that guarantees artists receive a portion of profits every time their works are re-sold. Now, as the government tries to move Bill C-11—the Copyright Modernization Act—through the House of Commons, a group that represents the interests of visual artists, is asking them to tack on similar legislation. CARFAC wants Canadian artists to get a five per cent royalty each time their work is sold.

CARFAC Ontario vice-president Barbara Gilbert gave CBC News one example of Canadian artists' frustration: "There's an Inuit artist who sold a work to a dealer for about $600 and it was recently sold at auction for well over $250,000 [...] Did he see any of it? Nope."

For media freelancers, the visual artists' situation should sound familiar. Freelance contracts are getting tougher and demanding more and more from content creators, asking them to give up their right to re-sell the work or effectively doing the same by claiming the right to re-sell the work to third parties themselves.

In both cases, it seems visual artists and media freelancers are learning that banding together might be the only way to maintain control over their rights and secure their slice of the profits from their work.

By Emma WoolleyThe Huffington Post is evil, right? It makes a lot of money from content it doesn’t pay for. It exploits writers and undermines their right to earn livings. It contributes to the overall devaluation of writing and especially web writing. I knew all of this and I still wrote for the Huffington Post.Most of you probably want to know…
Do you freelance at the Toronto Star or The Grid? There have been talks between the Canadian Writers Group/Canadian Media Guild and the Star's senior management about the new freelance agreement at the paper, which contains a couple of, in our view, unnecessary and troublesome clauses. The most recent meeting took place in late August, and…
Nicole S. Cohen, a PhD candidate in York University's Communication and Culture graduate program, is working on a large project on historical and contemporary efforts to organize freelance writers. As part of that project, she's written a paper entitled "Negotiating Writers' Rights: Freelance Cultural Labour and the Challenge of Organizing,"…
Gather a bunch of freelance writers together and it's almost always the number-one topic of conversation. The general public may expect us to be dissecting esoteric topics like the influence of Faustian legend on contemporary media, but for most of us it's: "Got any new tips for getting paid faster?"Several posts ago Story Board highlighted the…
If you've ever had trouble collecting payment from a client, this video is for you. Mike Monteiro, co-founder of Mule Design Studio gives his provocative (and sometimes profane) tips for protecting yourself as an independent contractor. His audience is a group of web designers at a San Francisco design conference, but freelancers of all stripes…
The Toronto Star has been issuing new agreements to its freelancers that contain broader language than previous ones. According to some freelancers we heard from, there was less pressure to sign and return the contracts when they were first distributed, but after questions were raised about its wording, a hard deadline was set.There are a few…
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…
If you missed it yesterday, familiarize yourself with Nino Ricci's open letter to the Globe before reading on.We asked Derek Finkle, founder of the Canadian Writers Group, which represents independent writers, about typical compensation for freelance travel writing and whether it's common for dailies to leave an invoice unpaid for six months, as…
In an open letter to the Globe posted on his own site, author Nino Ricci feigns concern for the paper's financial situation while castigating them for failing to pay him for a travel story published six months ago.Ricci, award-winning novelist and former president of PEN Canada, states in his letter that after the paper let him charge travel…

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