sr71plt
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2006
- Posts
- 51,872
One, rather small, step that we can take is titles. "I Raped My Mother And Sister" might aid sales, but presents a target for the anit-porn crowd. "Family Adventure" describes the same thing, but doesn't raise a fed flag. Just a thought.
This points to what authors can really do at this point. Watch your titles, clean flag words out of your tags, your blurbs, and your excerpts. Yes, sales will go down. But there will be a book on offer longer than if you didn't do it--and regular readers will "get it" and continue to buy.
Distributors like Amazon don't do this because they want to--they're making big bucks off it and don't want to spend profits in policing action. They do it in response to specific customer complaints to specific, isolated books (at least for now). Unless regulators force Amazon to keyword search texts themselves and quibble each title (low likelilhood of this happening, but it might if this takes a high profile), they will gladly rely on individual customer complaints. The complaints will have to be based on title, tags, blurb, or excerpt unless the complainer buys the book and searches--a lower-liklihood proposition in itself.
(In my banned title complaint, quite evidently a single customer complained, the book got banned, the publisher objected, and Amazon didn't even bother to check out the content before reinstating it. And the kicker is that they banned the e-book version but never took down the print version. Their heart--and pocketbook--weren't into the banning.)
Just don't "in your face" stick out of the pack with your book display.
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