If you are referring to the scenario I outlined, which is that an author finds they are successful and thus decides to monetize, there is nothing dishonest about informing fans they have changed their minds about something being all free. The only way this is dishonest is if the author had previously promised somewhere that "this series will always be free." Without this type of explicit promise, announcing their intentions is
incredibly honest. In the scenario I outlined as acceptable, there was no intent to deceive involved. What's dishonest about it?
It's dishonest for people to change their minds? Even if the stub has a "stub" tag or description, which is what I was describing as an acceptable scenario?
Or are you referring to some other scenario, which I disagreed with?
If the latter, then there's no need for continued dialogue since there's nothing to disagree with and I must conclude you've misread my post. If not, do continue.
No, no one promised anyone anything. This is your own assumption projected onto the purpose of this website. Unless you are the owner of this website, there is no way to know what the main purpose or motivation is or was.
The only thing that can be assumed with certainty is that the most obvious purpose of this site is for people to upload their own stories for whatever reason and that any random person online can access said stories for free. That's it. There's no other obvious assumption.
There is no inherent promise that the story will remain up or free, and many stories are abandoned or deleted at the whim of the author, often without warning. There is no guarantee of anything on a free website such as this. That is likely why it is
free--once you start charging for a service, you end up having obligations as part of a business arrangement. "Free" sidesteps these obligations.
Even without monetization, authors have the sole right to delete a fiction at their whim. They can be dealing with adverse life events, dealing with a mental health crises, or quite frankly, just bored of it--anything goes. Advance notice is simply a courtesy, not a requirement.
I certainly never promised random people on the internet anything when I uploaded on any of the platforms that I used. The only promise I made was to the websites themselves when I agreed to their TOS and privacy policy. That's it.
Why should they? Some stories are a flash in the pan type of success which cannot be replicated. Some authors only have one successful story under their belt, ever. There is no guarantee that their new story will gain the same traction or popularity, so why on earth should authors hamstring themselves in this way because some small % of their audience feels entitled to their work for free?
Because that is what this is: entitlement. No one owes you anything on a free website except basic civility, which is generally a part of the TOS or community rules. Nothing else.
Also, advertising works best if the advertisement itself is for the product that customers will get. Your suggestion is like saying you should give away free samples to Line A Energy Drinks and then use that campaign to try to sell Line B Energy Drink. How well do you think this tends to work?
Spoiler alert: Not nearly as well as an ad campaign for Line A and then selling Line A rather than Line B.
I find your rationale particularly pernicious since within the context of this discussion, the idea of giving readers advance warning before pay-locking these stories has already come up. That's already quite courteous toward readers, since the author has decided to allow current readers to continue reading their work for free until <date>. Normally, this date is measured in months, not days. I have yet to see any writer on RR or any other platform pull this without at least a month's notice, because that's more than enough time to finish whatever is left of the series. Further, said authors usually only lock the completed volume, meaning readers can continue reading the current volume as it updates.
There is no way to be fairer than this without taking a substantial financial hit on work that writers have spent a countless number of hours and effort on. Essentially, a simple interpretation of your post is that you want authors to sacrifice their projected earnings so you can get free enjoyment indefinitely off their work.
I'll be blunt: this smacks of entitlement to me. An author giving that much advance warning and that many chances to read a work has already done you a great courtesy. Quite frankly, I'm happy to buy an ebook of a work I've already read to support creators for the effort they've put in and the hours of entertainment they've already provided for free. If the work is especially good, I'm happy to buy a paper copy to put on my bookshelf. Even better if the author is selling signed copies off of their own store!
It's fantastic to see people doing well off of their hard work and passion, and it's not at all dishonest to be upfront about wanting to be compensated. It's the opposite: it's
completely honest.
So you think they shouldn't give warning at all? After all, what you are proposing here is a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" scenario, where the only way an author can get your approval is to simply not monetize at all. You started out saying you don't mind monetizing, but strip away your rhetoric down to the bones and it comes down to the fact that you simply don't want authors to stub their works to make money, even if they're being 1) completely upfront about what they're doing, and 2) giving readers plenty of time to finish up. In fact you seem to think this is somehow "dishonest", which doesn't fit any definition of dishonesty in the book.
The only way this is dishonest is if the author intended to do this from the beginning but pretended not to, but there's no way to know whether the market will like what they bring ahead of time. Most people just monetize because the opportunity presents itself. Sure, some people are careerists who can crank genre hits time after time, but they're usually pretty transparent about their process which is, again, honesty, not dishonesty. People who do this without being transparent are dishonest, yes, but I did not include this demographic in my original post.
As for your little comment about "Oh, you didn't finish in time?", that's not their responsibility. They gave you forewarning, and if you took no steps to either read the work or to download html copies of the work to read offline, it's on you, not them. You had the warning and ample time to do something to better your situation, and you didn't.
That's a "you" problem.
What, do you want the author to personally email out an epub to you out of gratitude for reading a free work for free or something?
Which big game companies are releasing AAA titles and then stubbing them? This process is basically called "freemium", and that's usually something players are told upfront. This has also been around since time games were a thing, since even back in the '90s, Interplay (when they were around), Activision, etc. used to sell freemium game CDs. I played Pitfall and Stone Keep that way. It's not like the CDs being freemium was a secret.
But I really am curious as to which big game companies are "stubbing" their games. No, really. I'd be interested in reading an article on this.
If you're referring to pay-to-play (subscription) and free-to-play (with microtransactions), these are not the same models as the stubbing process described.
I'm also not sure why you're comparing a large company with, basically, independent indie creators who are probably spending more money on their hobbies than they're getting, on the whole. Not very a good (or fair) comparison.
If you personally don't like it, then hey, whatever. You can like or dislike whatever you want. But there's no reason to call people who are being upfront and honest "dishonest" (that's a lie) and there's no reason to pretend people making money off of their work fairly are somehow victimizing you because you can't be bothered to read something for free within a time limit or because you don't want to support the author by buying an epub or something for 99 cents to 5 bucks.
P.S. I'm going to go out on a limb and guess you're either a core millennial or Gen Z. Am I right? Double or nothing bet that you were born
after 1990. Tell me how I did!