artgasim
Smut Writer
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2021
- Posts
- 2
As I have noticed new voice actors arriving quite often lately, I felt it would be good to address a couple things I have been seeing. A lack of tags can be a bit frustrating for a listener who want's to avoid certain scenes or phrases. Or perhaps, use the tags to find exactly what they're looking for. I listened to an audio the other day with a male voice, but he also had a female in the audio. There was no mention of who she is, that she is 18+ or if he had permission to even use her voice here. Does she even know her voice is being used in audio porn on this site? I feel this is why certain things are important being present in the text body.
That brings me to my next mention of crediting any material you are using which you did not write yourself. Simply put, if you didn't write it, you should be crediting the person who did as the original writer/creator of said material you are voicing. It's really that simple, you know if you wrote it, so give credit where it is due. Creating material takes time and effort, so they deserve the mention so others can find them and their work.
Perhaps some creators do not mind or maybe even notice, but I can assure you, some of us do.
So as new VA's enter the scene, they potentially don't know the etiquette most of us have learned and practiced over the years. Being helpful and mentioning it as we see it could greatly help them be successful and instill good habits if they are to continue creating voice work. This platform is not set up like Reddit where it's monitored by mods who address these things as part of the sub rules. Granted, Literotica does have their warning disclaimer asking if this is your content, of which you have to check the box prior to publishing. But there is nobody really watching it.
Does anyone have some suggestions here?
Should we just be reporting the post when they are not following the rules so site admin can check it out? (ei. using others voices or work without proper permission)
as in a natural consequences idea for learning purposes?
Do we as a community have resources or an FAQ page here on Literotica where new or unsure potential VAs can check out this sort of thing and become more informed prior to publishing? Sort of like a subreddits community rules and etiquette requirements.
Thanks for your time today. I just felt putting it out there for some discussion would be helpful. For both creators who do not want their work plagiarized and new comers who want to legit learn how to navigate their creativity in using other creators content.
Thanks
Art
That brings me to my next mention of crediting any material you are using which you did not write yourself. Simply put, if you didn't write it, you should be crediting the person who did as the original writer/creator of said material you are voicing. It's really that simple, you know if you wrote it, so give credit where it is due. Creating material takes time and effort, so they deserve the mention so others can find them and their work.
Perhaps some creators do not mind or maybe even notice, but I can assure you, some of us do.
So as new VA's enter the scene, they potentially don't know the etiquette most of us have learned and practiced over the years. Being helpful and mentioning it as we see it could greatly help them be successful and instill good habits if they are to continue creating voice work. This platform is not set up like Reddit where it's monitored by mods who address these things as part of the sub rules. Granted, Literotica does have their warning disclaimer asking if this is your content, of which you have to check the box prior to publishing. But there is nobody really watching it.
Does anyone have some suggestions here?
Should we just be reporting the post when they are not following the rules so site admin can check it out? (ei. using others voices or work without proper permission)
as in a natural consequences idea for learning purposes?
Do we as a community have resources or an FAQ page here on Literotica where new or unsure potential VAs can check out this sort of thing and become more informed prior to publishing? Sort of like a subreddits community rules and etiquette requirements.
Thanks for your time today. I just felt putting it out there for some discussion would be helpful. For both creators who do not want their work plagiarized and new comers who want to legit learn how to navigate their creativity in using other creators content.
Thanks
Art