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	<title>Comments on: Reader Question Week</title>
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		<title>By: cdthomas</title>
		<link>http://www.jeremiahtolbert.com/2009/06/reader-question-week/comment-page-1/#comment-171916</link>
		<dc:creator>cdthomas</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2009 20:26:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I&#039;m repeating this one, because this question stands outside my decisions to build a social media presence:

&quot;I don’t have a website or blog. And I don’t know if I want one.

I understand if I’d create a blog for nattering on, but most of that itch gets scratched by Twitter. I’m not much of an essay writer, because I think I find others who say what I’m thinking better than I would.

That leaves self-promotion, possibly, of my fiction (plays, poems, short stories). If I don’t want to go the full Doctorow and Creative-Commons license everything, then how do I decide how much of my work to publish online?

I’m not going to be the type of writer who obsessively searches for online theft, but I need to find a way of talking about what I’m doing before I’m published regularly by magazines, online or otherwise — learning how to be part of a writing SF/F/H community, I guess, but without my questions getting lost on web boards.&quot;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I’m repeating this one, because this question stands outside my decisions to build a social media presence:</p>
<p>“I don’t have a website or blog. And I don’t know if I want one.</p>
<p>I understand if I’d create a blog for nattering on, but most of that itch gets scratched by Twitter. I’m not much of an essay writer, because I think I find others who say what I’m thinking better than I would.</p>
<p>That leaves self-promotion, possibly, of my fiction (plays, poems, short stories). If I don’t want to go the full Doctorow and Creative-Commons license everything, then how do I decide how much of my work to publish online?</p>
<p>I’m not going to be the type of writer who obsessively searches for online theft, but I need to find a way of talking about what I’m doing before I’m published regularly by magazines, online or otherwise — learning how to be part of a writing SF/F/H community, I guess, but without my questions getting lost on web boards.”</p>
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