Subject: Re: I think it's the last part that's most important.
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Posted on: 2014-07-04 19:18:00 UTC

I was told in the beginning that you have to more charges than just OOC to justify a mission. Although, if they are OOC enough, there is probably something else wrong with the story.

On the slash issue, most characters are assumed straight, because they are seen with people of the opposite sex, or because they are not see with people of the same sex, but very few out and out state that they are emphatically not interested in the same sex, so I see a lot of interpretive room.

For ones who have actually explicitly stated their sexual orientation, then a fic not addressing that would be chargeable, I believe.

Creator statements of things completely lacking in evidence in the canon, I'm a little softer on. Yes, that is what they intended, but if they felt so strongly about it, why did they not find 10 words or 10 seconds to state it? Especially in a series of books, they've got hundreds of thousands, if not millions of words of opportunity to get their intentions into canon.

As a writer you've got two problems with sending your work out. No matter what you meant, people only see what you actually wrote, and secondly, they bring their own set of experiences to their interpretation of what you actually wrote, so, yeah, I really count author statements as a lot less than what the canon said.

I will take it as an influence, but if that is the only source negating something in a fic, I would not charge for it.

Just a note of advice, if the primary charge is utter and complete stupidity of plot and characterization with other wise good spelling and grammar, it is really hard to write a mission on it. Not sure why, you'd think pure stupid (and OOC) would make for good sporking, but I've tried it twice and it's not easy.

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