The other week we learned to exploit other people's blogs for our own personal gain. But the web allows many fields of exploitation to increase one's prestige and circulate one's name. Today I will teach you how to steal the stories of other authors and republish them in your name on the many literary sites and forums on the internet. Nobody will notice and you will make a good impression as an expert writer. So let's not waste time and get ready to show off our creative writing skills. Looking for ready-made stories The web is a no-man's land where we can wander as we please, reaping the benefits. Everything you publish online is free and anyone can benefit from it. There is no such thing as intellectual property, there is no copyright.
The first thing you need to do is therefore look for blogs by authors who have naively published their stories online , making their readers read them for free. They didn't publish them on Amazon or with any publisher, otherwise it would have been plagiarism. But by publishing them for free on the blog they are available to everyone: whoever arrives first can take them and republish Special Data them in their name. Looking for a publishing platform There are many platforms on the web - sites, blogs and forums - where an author can register and publish their stories to receive comments from readers. It's a great training ground to test your skills and learn to write better, don't you think? For example, there are Wattpad and EFP Fanfiction, two at random.

Wattpad is a community where members can publish stories, articles, poems, fan fiction and disseminate their creative writing to an audience. It is also available in smartphone apps. One of the mottos reads: “It's easy for anyone to be a writer on Wattpad”. And I believe that it is "easy", more "easy" than how you die. EFP Fanfiction, on the other hand, is a forum where you can publish both fan fiction works (therefore stories inspired by narrative universes created by other authors) and original stories. In this way an author has a direct relationship with his readers.