Recommended by Minhang District Criminal Dispute Lawyer

Shanghai book critic Ma Wei, another pen name Luo Meng, whose real name is Diao Minhuan, please identify her as an editor and literary friend, a plagiarism thief in Shanghai!

I solemnly declare that I am legally responsible for all statements made in my own name. If it involves a third-party organization or other people, no disrespect, thank you for providing screenshots and private letters about Ma Wei.

Diao Minhuan, known to have two pen names, namely Ma Wei and Luo Meng, please acknowledge the editor and author and cooperate cautiously.

I contributed to her in February 18+ 18, clearly stating that the prerequisite for publication is to sign my pen name. Diao Minhuan backhand changed my book review article "One Hundred Years of Tokyo, Rising from an Earthquake" to the title of "Tokyo Century" on June 19, and copied and pasted the full text in.

The bold words in red are the text of the original email, not the P picture.

20 18, 10 in June, Ma Wei invited the manuscript as an editor of a certain platform, and the price was bought out by 50 yuan. She said she would give it to her clients after receiving my manuscript. As for where the client will publish it, she doesn't know if she will tell me if she fails after a month's manuscript fee. After the book review, I will sell it through a fish platform, and the money for selling the book will be deducted from the manuscript fee.

I received six books from Minhang District, Shanghai and wrote six book reviews for her independently. Four of them, 1000 words, were published under the pseudonym of Ma Wei on the front pages of Shenzhen Special Zone Daily, Rule of Law Weekend and China Fine Arts Daily. During this period, she never told me whether these four book reviews had been published. I learned from Douban and Book Review Q that she has a bad reputation, but there is no real hammer. But when I gave a book review of Tokyo's century-old history, I particularly emphasized that I needed my signature to publish it. But then, just like the legend, I felt cheated. My signature was gone, so I took the cabbage price, because I felt that she deliberately concealed it from the beginning and did not follow the agreement. I felt cheated. Then I exposed it on the Internet, and she began to say malicious words, and soon sent a lawyer's letter (Douban and Weibo can also check). The lawyer's letter says that if I don't delete the post within a time limit, I may be investigated for criminal responsibility. It happened to be seen by my family. Honest people have never seen this thing, which saves me a little trouble. Besides, Ma Wei is strong enough to sue me on WeChat. I can only admit. Although reluctant, I deleted the post.

All chat records are screenshots and videos.

The above things were originally agreed not to be mentioned again, so I will violate the agreement and mention them here. I'm sorry, because one thing makes me angry, so I have to start from the beginning. Now I strongly demand that my book review articles be published under a pseudonym. I also put forward clear requirements for Ma Wei in WeChat and qq mailboxes, especially the bold red marks in the submissions, but she completely ignored my requirements and secretly changed the title of my book review article from the original "Hundred Years of Tokyo, Rising from an Earthquake" to her other pseudonym "Tokyo Century", and copied and pasted the text and published it in China Reading Newspaper. She thought it would be different.

I contacted Mr. Wang, the editor of the newspaper, to explain the matter. Mr. Wang attached great importance to my quick reply and informed Ma Wei (Romon). Ma Weixin found me and repeated the trick, saying that it was an oversight to write a wrong pen name. But this book review article was published a month before I paid for the first four articles I found, and I didn't know it at that time. She pretended not to publish it and failed. When I found that 40 or 50 days had passed, she received all the manuscript fees and kept. I don't agree to a settlement. If it is only reasonable to say that she cheated four manuscripts for the first time, causing disputes and defaulting on manuscript fees, then this time it is purely plagiarism as defined by law. I made it clear that the signature must be my pseudonym before it can be published. For publication, she changed her pen name to Romon. When I didn't agree to the settlement, and the premise of the settlement was to get my signature back, Ma Wei began to say malicious words again. She said that the last time I posted, she could sue me, and even my certified Weibo unit could go to court. If it's solved, she won't sue me.

But this time, I strongly disapprove of personal reconciliation. I choose to expose this story, so that all editors, teachers, authors and readers can clearly see the face of Ma Wei, a cultural critic and book reviewer who is sanctimonious and gives advice in major newspapers and media.

I also want to protect my rights through law, but the high lawyer fees are prohibitive. Besides, I may be dealing with a team. The netizen said that Ma Wei opened a peak studio in Shanghai, specializing in writing articles. She (Diao Minheng) is a master of law, and she has a law firm in Shanghai, so she can send lawyers' letters at will, so many authors who have worked with her on Douban can only suffer dumb losses, and all posts that are unfavorable to her are finally solved by her.

I don't know if this post will be forcibly deleted again by Ma Wei's various means. I just hope that there will be fewer bad writers like Diao Minheng in the author circle, and I also hope that the copyright protection laws in China will be more perfect, the cost of rights protection will be lower, and the interests of small writers at the bottom will be more protected.