Protecting My Words: Why Paraphrasing is Still Theft

​It has come to my attention recently that a specific stanza from my book has been circulating online in a distorted form. As an author, seeing your work resonate with others is a gift, but seeing it stripped of its origin and altered to bypass ownership is deeply disheartening.

The Original vs. The Imitation
​In my book, The Weight of Tender Things (ISBN 978-627-94725-0-2), I wrote a specific line that many of you have shared and connected with ( It went viral on social media the moment I posted it):

​”People, people, people, an ocean of people, but I can’t find even a drop of humanity.” 

Sadia Hakim / Goodreads

​Recently, I discovered a version being shared on Instagram and other platforms that looks like this:

​”Humans, Humans, Humans, entire oceans of humans, yet not a single drop of humanity.”

​At first glance, some might think this is just a coincidence or a “different version.” However, as the creator of the original text, I need to be clear: swapping a single word for a synonym does not make a poem new. It makes it a copy.

​The Reality of Colorable Variation
​In the world of intellectual property, what has happened here is known as a colorable variation. This occurs when someone makes minor, superficial changes to a work specifically to hide the fact that they have stolen the core structure.

​By keeping my exact triple repetition at the start and the specific “ocean versus drop” metaphor, the infringer has stolen the “heart” of my poem. Changing “people” to “humans” is a cosmetic change that does not erase my ownership of the creative expression.

Why This Isn’t a “New” Work
​For a derivative work to be legal and ethical, it must be transformative. It must add significant new ideas, a new message, or a new creative perspective. This version adds nothing. It contributes zero new creative value to the literary world. Instead, it is a mechanical substitution intended to misappropriate my work while attempting to bypass copyright detection systems.

​Copyright law protects the Total Concept and Feel of a literary work. The cadence, the rhythm, and the metaphorical arrangement of this stanza belong to me as the author.

​A Final Note on Integrity
​I am sharing this today to set the record straight and to protect the integrity of my writing. To those who support my work and share it with credit, I am incredibly grateful. To those who feel that paraphrasing is a loophole for theft, I hope this serves as a reminder that a poem is an author’s intellectual property.
​I have taken the necessary steps to report this non-literal copyright infringement to the relevant platforms. My words are my own, and I will continue to defend the creative labor that went into every page of my book.

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