<dd>Please email us at <ahref="mailto:support@gluejar.com">support@gluejar.com</a>. Especially during our alpha phase, we want to make sure everything on the site runs as smoothly as possible. Thanks for helping us do that.</dd>
<dd><ahref="/">Unglue.it</a> is a a place for individuals and institutions to join together to give their favorite ebooks to the world. We work with rights holders to decide on fair compensation for releasing a free, legal edition of their traditionally published books, under <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> licensing. Then everyone chips in to raise that sum. When the threshold is reached, we pay the rights holders; they issue an unglued digital edition; and you're free to read and share it, with everyone, on the device of your choice, worldwide.</dd>
<dd>Crowdfunding is collectively pooling donations (or pledges) to support some cause. Using the internet to coordinate means that complete strangers can work together, drawn by a common cause. This also means the number of donors can be vast, so individual donations can be as large or as small as people are comfortable with, and still add up to enough to do something amazing.<br/><br/>
Want to see some examples? The <ahref="http://buyindiaalibrary.wordpress.com/">Buy India a Library</a> project (cofounded by an Unglue.it team member) crowdfunded donations -- mostly small ones, around $20 -- to build a school library in India. <ahref="http://www.kickstarter.com/">Kickstarter</a> lets artists and inventors solicit funds to make their projects a reality. For instance, webcomic artist Rich Burlew sought $57,750 to reprint his comics in paper form -- and raised <ahref="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/599092525/the-order-of-the-stick-reprint-drive">close to a million</a>.<br/><br/>
In other words, crowdfunding is working together to support something you love. By pooling donations, big and small, from all over the world, we can make huge things happen.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it is free to join. Most of the things you can do here -- discovering books, adding them them to your wishlist, commenting, sharing -- are free too. If you choose to support a campaign, you may pledge whatever amount you're comfortable with.<br/><br/>
If you're a rights holder, starting campaigns is free, too. You only pay Unglue.it if your campaign succeeds. For the basics on campaigns, see the FAQ on <ahref="/faq/campaigns/">Campaigns</a>; for more details, see the <ahref="/faq/rightsholders/">FAQ for Rights Holders</a>.</dd>
To fund a campaign, you'll need a valid credit card. To start a campaign, you'll need to establish yourself with us as a rights holder, including demonstrating that you have the rights to the content you want to unglue. See the FAQs <ahref="/faq/rightsholders/">for Rights Holders</a> for more.</dd>
<dd>No. When you unglue a book, the copyright stays with its current owner.<br/><br/>
Ungluing involves licensing rights, just like traditional publishing transactions. We use <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> licenses to make ebooks available to the world while respecting and protecting copyright.<br/><br/>
If you are a copyright holder, you will retain your copyright when you unglue a book. CC licenses are non-exclusive, so you also retain the right to enter into separate licensing agreements. You can read more about these licenses at the <ahref="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Frequently_Asked_Questions">Creative Commons FAQ</a>.</dd>
<dt>If I'm a rights holder and I unglue my book, does that mean I can never make money from it again?</dt>
<dd>No! You are free to enter into additional licensing agreements for other, non-unglued, editions of the work, including translation and film rights. You may continue to sell both print and ebook editions. You may use your unglued books as free samples to market your other works -- for instance, later works in the same series. You can use them to attract fans who may be interested in your speaking engagements, merchandise, or other materials. You absolutely may continue to profit from ungluing books -- and we hope you do!<br/><br/>
For some examples of how authors and publishers have made free ebooks work for their business plans, see Cory Doctorow's <ahref="http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/columns-and-blogs/cory-doctorow/index.html">columns for Publisher's Weekly</a>, <ahref="http://wahoocorner.blogspot.com/2012/01/how-kdp-select-saved-my-book.html">David Kazzie's <I>Jackpot</I></a>, and the <ahref="http://www.baen.com/library/defaultTitles.htm">Baen Free Library</a>. If unglued books are working for you, we'd love to hear your story. Tell us at <ahref="mailto:support@gluejar.com">support@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dd>Lots of reasons! Unglued ebooks may be part of a marketing strategy to publicize other books or increase the value of an author's brand. Or they may be books that are no longer selling through conventional channels, and ungluing them is a low-risk way to get some extra value out of them. Or ungluing provides a simple digital strategy that pays for itself. Or the books may have been written to advance a cause, add to the public conversation, or increase human knowledge. Or maybe the author wants to leave a legacy that enriches everyone, now and in the future. After all, books succeed by having readers.</dd>
<dd>No. Unglue.it dedicated to licensing works to the public commons, not publishing them or owning rights. We work for books that have been published in other ways. We are NOT a publisher ourselves.</dd>
<dd>A rights holder is the person (or entity) that holds the legal right to copy, distribute, or sell a book in some way. There may be one entity with all the rights to a work, or the rights may be split up among different entities: for example, one who publishes the print edition in the United States, another who publishes the print edition in the EU, another who holds electronic rights, et cetera. For ungluing purposes, the rights holder is an entity who has uncontested worldwide electronic rights to a work.<br/><br/>
If you have written a book and not signed any contracts about it, you hold all the rights. If you have signed a contract with a publisher to produce, distribute, publish, or sell your work in a particular format or a particular territory, whether or not you still hold rights depends on the language of that contract. We encourage you to check your contracts. It may be in your interest to explore launching an Unglue.it campaign jointly with your publisher.<br/><br/>
If you haven't written a book but you have had business or family relationships with someone who has, it's possible that you are a rights holder (for instance, you may have inherited rights from the author's estate, or your company may have acquired them during a merger). Again, this all depends on the specific language of your contracts. We encourage you to read them closely. Unglue.it cannot provide legal advice.<br/><br/>
If you believe you are a rights holder and would like to discuss ungluing your works, please contact us at <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dd>Great! Find it in our database (using the search box above) and add it to your wishlist, so we know it should be on our list, too. You can also contact us at <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a></dd>
<dt>I know a book that should be unglued, and I own its electronic rights.</dt>
<dd>Fabulous! Please refer to the FAQ <ahref="/faq/rightsholders/">for Rights Holders</a> and then contact us at <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dt>What is Open Access or Creative Commons versus PD?</dt>
<dd>Eric Hellman has written a series of articles about how Open Access can apply to ebooks. The first is <ahref="http://go-to-hellman.blogspot.com/2011/04/open-access-ebooks-part-1.html">on his blog</a>.</dd>
There's a <ahref="/accounts/password/reset/">forgot your password</a> link at the bottom of the <ahref="/accounts/login/">sign in page</a>. Enter the email address you use for your account and we'll send you an email to help you reset your password.
<dd>Check your spam folder for mail from accounts@gluejar.com. If that doesn't work, contact us at <ahref="mailto:support@gluejar.com">support@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dd>Click on "My Profile" near the top of your user profile page. (If you're logged in, your profile page is <ahref="/">here</a>.) Some new options will appear. You can enter your personal URL and your LibraryThing username here. There are one-click options to connect your Twitter, Facebook, and GoodReads accounts. (You'll be asked to log in to those accounts, if you aren't logged in already.) Make sure to click on "Save Settings".</dd>
<dd>If you connect your Facebook or Twitter accounts, we'll use your user pics from those sites for your avatar here. If you connect LibraryThing or GoodReads, you can import your books there onto your wishlist here, using the My Profile area. And we'll display book-specific and you-specific links to those sites for you.</dd>
<dt>I don't want to connect my accounts. Do I have to?</dt>
<dd>Nope.</dd>
<dt>How can I change my profile name or password?</dt>
<dd>At the bottom of every page there's a link to an <ahref="/accounts/edit/">account editing page</a> where you can change your profile name and password.</dd>
<dd>We're in the process of building out our notification system, including ways for you to control which notifications you receive, but we haven't finished that yet.<br/><br/>
If you receive our newsletter, there's a link at the bottom of every message to manage your preferences. If you don't and would like to, you can <ahref="http://eepurl.com/fKLfI">sign up here</a>.
<dd>Short version: no. You may share information with Rights Holders so they can deliver premiums to you, but this is not required. For the long version, please read our <ahref="/privacy/">privacy policy</a>.
<dd>For support requests, <ahref="mailto:support@gluejar.com">support@gluejar.com</a>. For general inquiries, use our Ask Questions Frequently account, <ahref="mailto:aqf@gluejar.com">aqf@gluejar.com</a>. For rights inquiries, <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dd>We are a small group that believes strongly that ebooks can make the world richer in new and diverse ways, and that we all benefit from the hard work of their creators. We come from the worlds of entrepreneurship, linked data, physics, publishing, education, and library science, to name a few. You can learn more about us at our personal home pages (linked above) or <ahref="http://gluejar.com/team">the team page</a> of our corporate site.</dd>
<dd>No. Gluejar, the parent company of Unglue.it, is a for-profit company with a public-spirited mission. We work with both non-profit and commercial partners.</dd>
<dd>Because legal stickiness means you can't reliably lend or share your ebooks, borrow them from the library, or read them on the device of your choice. Because -- like public radio -- ebooks are expensive to create but cheap to distribute, so covering their fixed costs and reasonable profit up front can be an appealing system for authors, publishers, readers, and libraries. Because we all have books we love so much we'd like to give them to the world.</dd>
These need to be put in proper order. Also this should be broken down into the general FAQ and the RH FAQ; only the basic create/manage campaign, and the supporter mechanisms of interacting with campaigns, should be in the basic FAQ; more technical questions about running campaigns should be in the RH FAQ.
<dd>To start a campaign, you need to be a verified rights holder who has signed a Platform Services Agreement with us. If you hold the electronic rights for one or more works, please contact <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a> to start the process.</dd>
<dt>How can I claim a work for which I am the rights holder?</dt>
<dd>On every book page there is a Details tab. If you have a signed Platform Services Agreement on file, one of the options on the Details tab will be "Claim This Work". If you represent more than one rights holder, choose the correct one for this work and click "Claim".<br/><br/>If you expect to see that and do not, either we do not have a PSA from you yet, or we have not yet verified and filed it. Please contact us at <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a>.</dd>
<dd>You need to claim a work before you will be able to start a campaign for it. Additionally, we're working new features for verified rights holders which will help you show off your works and connect to your readers. Claiming your works will let you take advantage of these features in the future.</dd>
<dd>If you're looking for a specific book, search for it. The book's page becomes a campaign page when its campaign starts. Your bookmarks and widgets for that book will still work.<br/><br/>
If you want to find an interesting campaign and don't have a specific book in mind, see the Explore sidebar (on almost any page except the FAQs) for some of our favorites.</dd>
<dt>Why does it say a book's campaign has been suspended or withdrawn?</dt>
<dd>If there is a dispute between Gluejar and the book's rights holder, or if we discover evidence that a book's rights are in dispute after launching a campaign, it may be necessary for us to withdraw or suspend the campaign.</dd>
<dd>Yes. In fact, rights holders are encouraged to update their supporters about the progress of the campaign. (For an example of exceptionally successful updates, check out <ahref="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/599092525/the-order-of-the-stick-reprint-drive/posts">Rich Burlew's Kickstarter campaign</a>, which grossed over a million dollars, in part because of his frequent and creative communication and improvements to the rewards being offered.) Note that the campaign's deadline cannot be changed and its threshold may not be increased.</dd>
<dd>Yes. Again, while the deadline and threshold cannot be changed, rights holders are encouraged to add thank-you messages for supporters and update them on the progress of ebook conversion (if needed).</dd>
<dd>When a book has an active ungluing campaign, its book page turns into its campaign page. This means that, in addition to the standard book page information, it also features rewards for different pledge tiers; a Support button; and information supplied by the rights holder about the book and the campaign.</dd>
<dd>There's a Support button on all campaign pages, or you can just click on the premium you'd like to receive. You'll be asked to select your premium and specify your pledge amount, and then you'll be taken to PayPal to complete the transaction. While you may certainly use your PayPal account if you have one, you do not need one; you can use your credit card normally.</dd>
<dd>In most cases, your account will be charged by the end of the next business day after the success of a campaign. If a campaign doesn't succeed, you won't be charged.</dd>
<dt>What if I want to change or cancel a pledge?</dt>
<dd>You can modify your pledge by going to the book's page and clicking on the "Change Pledge" button. (The "Support" button you clicked on to make a pledge is replaced by the "Change Pledge" button after you pledge.)</dd>
<dd>Your pledge will time out according to its original time limit. If the campaign is resolved and reactivated before your pledge has timed out, your pledge will become active again. If the campaign is not reactivated before your pledge's time limit, your pledge will expire and you will not be charged. As always, you will only be charged if a campaign is successful, within its original time limit.</dd>
<dd>If the rights holder for the work you're supporting is a nonprofit, please contact them directly to inquire. Unglue.it cannot offer tax deductions.</dd>
<dd>Premiums are bonuses people get for supporting a successful campaign, to thank them and incentivize them to pledge. If you've ever gotten a tote bag from NPR, you know what we're talking about.</dd>
<dd>An unglued ebook is an already-published book that's been rereleased under a <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> license, after obtaining permission and compensating the rights holder.<br/><br/>
What does this mean for you? If you're a book lover, you can read unglued ebooks for free, on the device of your choice, in the format of your choice, and share them with all your friends. If you're a library, you can lend them to your patrons with no checkout limits or simultaneous user restrictions, and preserve them however you think best. If you're a rights holder, you get a guaranteed up-front payment in lieu of royalties on this edition, while retaining copyright and all interests in other editions of your work.<br/><br/>
Unglued ebooks are a win-win solution for readers, libraries, and authors, publishers.
<dd>The author or publisher set a price for giving the book to the world. Once you and your fellow ungluers raise enough money to meet that price, the Unglued ebook is available at no charge, for everyone, everywhere!</dd>
<dd>Yes. You choose what books to wishlist and what books to support. Your passion will drive the campaigns. We aim to host campaigns for diverse subjects genres, from romance novels to poetry, from history to medicine, from the lectures of famous scentists to your favorite chapter book when you were 8 years old.</dd>
<dd>No. Unglued books can be anything in copyright, whether 75 years or 7 days old, whether they sell in paperback or hardcover and or can only be found in used bookstores -- or nowhere. But the copyright owners and any one else with a claim on the book need to agree.</dd>
<dd>In general, no. Unglue.it does not support campaigns for self-published books that have not previously been sold in the retail market. If your self-published book has been for sale for at least 6 months, let's talk. (<ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a>).</dd>
<dd>No. There are other crowdfunding sites devoted to new creative works, and we encourage you to investigate them. Once your book has been published, we'd love to talk to you.</dd>
<dd>All unglued ebooks are released under a Creative Commons license. Unless otherwise specified for specific books, we use the <ahref="creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license (CC BY-NC-ND) license</a>. The specific Creative Commons license is chosen by the rights holder. <br/><br/>
This means that you <b>can</b>: make copies; keep them for as long as you like; shift them to other formats (like .mobi or PDF); share them with friends or on the internet; download them for free.<br/><br/>
Under NC (non-commercial) licenses, you <b>cannot</b>: sell them, or otherwise use them commercially, without permission from the rights holder.<br/><br/>
Under ND (no derivatives) licenses, you <b>cannot</b>: make derivative works, such as translations or movies, without permission from the rights holder; <br/><br/>
Under all CC licenses, you <b>cannot</b>: remove the author's name from the book, or otherwise pass it off as someone else's work; or remove or change the CC license.</dd>
<dt>What does non-commercial mean under Creative Commons?</dt>
<dd>Creative Commons doesn't define "commercial" very well. So as part of the Unglue.it process, ungluing rights holders agree that "For purposes of interpreting the CC License, Rights Holder agrees that 'non-commercial' use shall include, without limitation, distribution by a commercial entity without charge for access to the Work."</dd>
<dd>Unglued ebooks are distributed with NO DRM, so they'll work on Kindle, iPad, Kobo, Nook, Android, Mac, Windows, Linux... you get the idea. Whether you have an ereader, a tablet, a desktop or laptop computer, or a smartphone, there are reading apps that work for you. Ebook editions issued through unglue.it will be available in EPUB, MOBI, and/or PDF to make it easy for you. If the format available today don't work in the future, anyone will be able to shift unglued books to a formats that will continue to work for our chldren's children. </dd>
<dt>Do I need to have a library card to read an unglued ebook?</dt>
<dd>No. (Though we hope you have a library card anyway!) While your library may make unglued ebooks available, they will be available from other sources as well.</dd>
<dt>How long do I have to read my unglued book? When does it expire?</dt>
<dd>It doesn't! You may keep it as long as you like. There's no need to return it, and it won't stop working after some deadline.</dd>
<dt>I love my unglued ebook and I want to loan it to my friends. Can I?</dt>
<dd>Yes! Because everything with a <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> license is free to copy and share, you can copy your unglued ebook file and give it to anyone you want. You can all read and discuss it on GoodReads or LibraryThing at the same time. The Rights Holder has given you permission to spread the word to readers everywhere.<br/><br/>
Just don't sell, adapt, or abridge it without checking the license. All unglued ebooks are licensed for noncommercial uses. Of course, you're welcome to still buy other editions -- paperbacks, hardcovers, or audio -- too.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it will provide links to places where you can find unglued and public domain ebooks. We will not host them ourselves. We encourage you to look for them at bookstores, libraries, literary blogs, social reading sites, and all kinds of places people go to read and talk about books. You don't need our permission to host a free unglued ebook on your own site.</dd>
<dd>Because books out of copyright are already free for you to copy, remix, and share! If a book is in the <ahref="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain">public domain</a>, it doesn't need to be unglued.</dd>
<dd>Unfortunately, it can be complicated -- which is why Unglue.it wants to simplify things, by making unglued ebooks unambiguously legal to use in certain ways. The laws governing copyright and the public domain vary by country, so a book can be copyrighted in one place and not in another. In the United States, the <ahref="http://www.librarycopyright.net/digitalslider/">Library Copyright Slider</a> gives a quick estimate. <br/><br/>
Unglue.it signs agreements assuring the copyright status of every work we unglue, so you can be confident when reading and sharing an unglued ebook.</dd>
<dt>Unglue.it lists a book that I know is already CC licensed or available in the public domain. How can I get the link included?</dt>
<dd>If you are logged in to Unglue.it, the "Details" page for every work lists the edition we know about. There a link for every edition that you can use to tell us about CC or public domain douwnloads.</dd></dl>
<dt>What do I need to do to become an authorized Rights Holder on Unglue.it?</dt>
<dd>Contact Amanda Mecke, <ahref="mailto:amecke@gluejar.com">amecke@gluejar.com</a>, to discuss signing our Platform Services Agreement. This is the first step in being able to make an offer to license, set a monetary goal, and run a campaign on Unglue.it.</dd>
<dt>Do I need to know the exact titles I might want to unglue before I sign the Platform Services Agreement?</dt>
<dd>No. You only need to agree to the terms under which you will use Unglue.it to raise money to release an ebook using a <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> license. You can decide which specific titles you wish to make available for licensing later. You can run campaigns for as many, or as few, titles at a time as you like.</dd>
<dd>First, you need to be an authorized rights holder with a signed Platform Services Agreement on file. Please contact <ahref="mailto:rights@gluejar.com">rights@gluejar.com</a> to start this process. Once we have your PSA on file, you'll be able to claim your works and you'll have access to tools for launching and monitoring campaigns. We'll be happy to walk you through the process personally.</dd>
<dd>Show the world why we should love your book. What makes it powerful, intriguing, moving, thought-provoking, important? How does it capture readers' imaginations, engage their minds, or connect to their emotions? Remind readers who loved the book why they loved it, and give people who haven't read it reasons they want to.<br/><br/>
We strongly encourage you to include video. You can upload it to YouTube and embed it here. We also strongly encourage links to help readers explore further -- authors' home pages, organizations which endorse the book, positive reviews, et cetera. Think about blurbs and awards which showcase your book. But don't just write a catalog entry or a laundry list: be relatable, and be concise.</dd>
<dd>In addition to the required set of Unglue.it premiums, you're encouraged to sweeten the deal for your supporters by offering special premiums. Think about things that uniquely represent yourself or the work, that are appealing, and that you can deliver quickly and within your budget. For example, authors could consider offering skype sessions as premiums for libraries or schools that might want to plan an event around the unglued book.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it will share supporters' emails and the premiums they are owed with rights holders if, and only if, a campaign succeeds. If you need additional information to fulfill premiums, you may email ungluers directly. Rights holders are required to comply with the Unglue.it privacy policy.</dd>
<dd>Of course you'll want them to support your campaign financially, and make that pitch. But they also want to feel like they're part of the excitement of the campaign and the love for your book. Invite them to discuss the book in the Comments tab, to share the campaign via email and social media using the Share column links, and to embed the campaign widget in their blogs. And think about other ways you can get supporters involved, too: discussions on social reading sites? A Twitter hashtag? Uploading Flickr photos or YouTube videos of themselves with your book? (Prizes or acknowledgements for the person who photographs your book in the most unusual location?) Think of ways you can invite them to express and share their enthusiasm, and how you can reward them (not just monetarily) for doing so.</dd>
<dt>How can supporters contact me?</dt>
<dd>If you'd like supporters to contact you directly, please include (or link to) your contact information in your campaign page and profile. Make sure you're also monitoring the Comments tabs on your works' pages (whether or not they have active campaigns).</dd>
<dt>What is my responsibility for answering questions from supporters and non-supporters?</dt>
<dd>It's up to you. However, our experience watching and running crowdfunding campaigns suggests that you'll do best if you're engaged, prompt, and personable. In fact, don't just think in terms of answering questions (though you should absolutely do that) -- think about cultivating and contributing to the conversation.</dd>
<dt>I need help using social media channels to publicize my campaign.</dt>
<dd>We're developing a social media toolkit for rights holders. Please tell us what you think should be in it so we can serve you better: <ahref="mailto:andromeda@gluejar.com">andromeda@gluejar.com</a>. In the meantime we're happy to help you one-on-one, at the same address.</dd>
<dd>We will not provide you contact information, except as needed to fulfill premiums after successful campaigns. Supporters may voluntarily disclose certain contact information (such as Twitter handles) on their profile pages. We encourage you to be thoughtful in your use of this information. Supporters have likely provided it as a way to connect with other like-minded people, not as a marketing tool, so please engage with it in that spirit.</dd>
Also, pay attention to places they're talking about your campaign. This might be the Comments tab, a hashtag on Twitter, the comments section of your blog, a forum on your web site, your Facebook page, et cetera. Read these spaces regularly to see what people are saying, and to participate in the conversation.</dd>
<dd>On every campaign page, you can generate a widget that you can embed wherever you like. There are also links to share the page via email and social networks.<br/><br/>
Have other ways you want to share? Your own blog, newsletter, or social media presence? Your friends, and their friends? Media contacts? Go for it!<br/><br/>
Need more ideas? We're happy to work with rights holders personally to craft a campaign strategy.</dd>
<dd>We automatically generate those lists from the books with the most (or most recent) wishes, pledges, and comments. The more people you can rally to show their love of your book, the more likely it is to be featured there.</dd>
<dt>How can I get press coverage or social media buzz for my campaign?</dt>
<dd>We're developing a social media toolkit to help you with this; stay tuned. We're also happy to work with you one-on-one. Email <ahref="mailto:support@gluejar.com">support@gluejar.com</a>.
<dt>I am a copyright holder. Do I need to already have a digital file for a book I want to nominate for a pledge drive?</dt>
<dd>No. You may run campaigns for any of your books, even those that exist only in print copies or are out of print. Any print book can be scanned to create a digital file that can then become an ePub unglued ebook.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it prefers that rights holders have PayPal accounts as it will simplify the process of paying you when a campaign succeeds. If you do not have a PayPal account, please address this with us before signing the Platform Services Agreement and we'll find a way to make sure you can be paid. There may be an additional cost to receive funds other than through Paypal.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it uses Paypal for payment and Paypal users may contest charges. Unglue.it is not liable for this and rights holders are liable for any chargebacks. We encourage rights holders to provide clear, timely communication to their supporters throughout the campaign to ensure they remember what they pledged to and why.</dd>
<dd>Although credit cards are authorized at the time of pledging, a small percentage of cards will get voided between the time of authorization and the time the credit card is actually charged. Rights holders are responsible for any funding shortfall due to voided credit cards.</dd>
<dd>If you are a 501(c)3 or similar, please consult your own attorneys and accountants about the tax deductibility of ungluers' contributions. Unglue.it cannot offer tax deductions or advice.</dd>
<dd>Unglue.it will be in communication with you about when campaigns should go live. On your <ahref="/rightsholders/">rights holder dashboard</a>, you will be able to see all works you have claimed and the status of any associated campaigns.</dd>
<dd>After we reach the threshold price Unglue.it will issue you a closing memo, which will cover your gross and net proceeds. Supporters' money will be put in escrow (through PayPal) until you deliver an ePub file meeting Unglue.it's quality standards, at which point payment will be released to you via your PayPal account. If Unglue.it does not receive a suitable ePub file within 90 days, we will deduct conversion costs from your funds and release the rest to you.</dd>
<dd>Campaigns are scheduled to close at midnight eastern time of the day when they hit their funding threshold. They may continue accruing funding up to that time, including funds over their goal.</dd>
<dd>When a campaign succeeds, Unglue.it will deduct a 6% commission on the funds raised. PayPal also charges a small percentage fee on each transaction. If you do not have a suitable ePub version of your book available, you will also need to cover conversion costs; please price this into your goal for a campaign. Details are spelled out in the Platform Services Agreement that rights holders must sign before launching an Unglue.it campaign.</dd>
<dt>If I am an author with my book still in print, can I still start a Campaign to unglue it?</dt>
<dd>This depends entirely on your original contract with your publisher. You should seek independent advice about your royalty clauses and the "Subsidiary Rights" clauses of your contract. The Authors' Guild provides guidance for its members.</dd>
<dt>If I am an author do I have to talk to my publisher or agent first?</dt>
<dd>It is your responsibility to get advice on the current status of any contracts you may have ever had for the right to publish your work, whether or not a book is in print now. <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> licenses are media neutral and worldwide (English). You may need waivers from other parties who have exclusive licenses for this book.</dd>
<dt>If I am a publisher, but I do not have an ebook royalty in my contract, can I sign your Platform Services Agreement?</dt>
<dd>We can't interpret your particular contract regarding subsidiary rights and your ability to use a Creative Commons license. Please seek qualified independent advice regarding the terms of your contract. In any event, you will also want the author to cooperate with you on a successful fundraising campaign, and you can work together to meet the warranties of the PSA.</dd>
<dt>Is the copyright holder the same as a Rights Holder?</dt>
<dd>Not necessarily. If you are the author and copyright holder but have a contract with a publisher, the publisher may be the authorized Rights Holder with respect to electronic rights, and they may be able to sign a licensing agreement on your behalf. Again, you must get advice about your individual contract, especially subsidiary rights clauses and exclusivity.</dd>
<dt>Can I offer a book to be Unglued even if I cannot include all the illustrations from the print edition?</dt>
<dd>Yes. If permission to reprint cannot not be obtained for items such as photographs, drawings, color plates, as well as quotations from lyrics and poetry, we can produce an unglued edition which leaves them out. You must indicate the difference between the editions on your Campaign page.</dd>
<dd>The Creative Commons licenses are non-exclusive. They will apply only to the unglued edition, not to the print, audio, or any other editions. They does not affect the rights status of those other editions. If you use the no-derivative, non commercial license (CC BY-NC-ND), no one else may sell your book or make derivatives unless you give them permission to do so.</dd>
<dd>No. An Unglued Ebook is released to the world. It uses a <ahref="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> license which is territory-neutral. That is, the unglued ebook can be read by anyone, anywhere in the world, subject always to the limitations of the license.</dd>
Will you tell me when campaigns I have pledged to succeed?
What does it mean when I wish for a book to be Unglued?
Can I share my wish list with others?
I see where I can comment on a campaign, but where can I talk about it with other readers?
See our links to Goodreads, Library Thing...etc where you can join conversations in progress.
-- stuff that will only go on the RH FAQ (if it's above, needs to be copy/pasted over to there)
Questions about becoming an authorized Rights Holder
Does a Creative Commons license mean the Rights Holders doesn't get paid?
No. An Unglued Ebook is pre-paid. A CC BY NC ND license means no one else can sell or adapt the ebook for profit. The Rights Holder can set as high a fee as wanted as a fundraising goal, instead of waiting decades for royalties.