altnameJag said:
If you're under a contractual obligation not to publish elsewhere or not to self-publish, then yes. Because contracts have state backing.
That's a pretty bizarre line for me.
It's still an opt-in scenario. Which, by the way, is technically censorship in the sense that posting here is censorship because we've agreed to terms of use.But as it pertains to any serious discussion on an issue that needs to be fixed? I disagree.
When you agree to produce content for someone that meets certain criteria, then you are obligated to meet those criteria. Depending on the nature of the agreement, that could include them shelving your product, asking you to edit it, or even editing it on your behalf.
Your work, your art, is only truly yours until you enter into some sort of business relationship, unless that relationship still gives you creative control. Artists should/do understand this going in. You have signed away some of your rights as a creator for money. That the government can then enforce this does not make it an issue.
As far as a baseline?
The Rogue Wolf said:
But hey, in the interests of clarity, let's all play a little mental game.
Can I just briefly summarise the issue that is of concern to me, or are the questions strictly necessary?
Censorship can take many forms. It even includes the dreaded "self-censorship," which most of us do all the time. It's part of living in society. We--most of us, anyway--understand that the things we say and do have repercussions beyond us.
The problem should come in when we are denied any venue to speak/publish/whatever. For this to truly be an issue, it should not be something you yourself have opted into, unless that was done under duress or otherwise illegally. For these intents and purposes, even if you want your book to come out, you're not being censored if the book you signed an exclusivity deal over ends up being shelved rather than published. If you of your own free will sign something giving them that kind of control, the editor and publisher is within an acceptable right to not publish it.
Such a situation is worsened if it is legally punishable. This is why people focus on governments, because few other bodies have the capacity to do this.
As perhaps an example more relevant to this site would go, if the Freedonia ratings board refuses certification of a video game, thus legally preventing its sale (Freedonia has laws explicitly forbidding the sale of unrated games, you see), that's censorship. If a game company decides not to sell their game in Freedonia, that's their choice. But it ain't, for these intents and purposes, censorship.
The former is a scenario that should not happen. The latter may be a scenario I don't want to happen, but that's a different story.
By the way, you should have the legal right to protest such a decision, boycott the company that does it, etc. This is frequently called "bullying" or "censorship" when done to a body someone likes, but "free market" and "free speech" when done to a body they don't. Which always disappoints me, because I can agree with Westboro Baptist or Phil Robertson or Chick Fil-a's right to hate me all they want, and we've got people arguing whether or not their recreational toys are being censored based not on principle but on whether or not they personally like the people/politics involved.
If you would still like those questions answered, I can do that. But I think this establishes a more concrete idea of what I'm talking about than those situations can.
inmunitas said:
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"Overt" does not mean "overly", which is what you seem to be confusing the term with.
It's clear from their context they mean "openly, explicitly," which falls into the definition of overtly.