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Yes, there are rules for this type of thing. They come down to what your contract says. When you have a work published, you'll have a contract. Check out my response at the question mentioned abo...
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#3: Attribution notice added
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/33224 License name: CC BY-SA 3.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#2: Initial revision
Yes, there are rules for this type of thing. They come down to what your contract says. - When you have a work published, you'll have a contract. Check out my response at the question [mentioned above](https://writing.stackexchange.com/questions/32412/legal-snags-publishing-a-short-story-with-one-publisher-extended-story-with-ano) for specifics on what type of rights the publisher may want. Many will require that the piece has never been published before, including online, and including on a personal blog. - Check the submission policies before you submit in order to be extra sure. - Let the editors know if it's been published before, even just on a personal blog. - If you pull it down, Google and other search engines have likely already indexed the piece, which means if someone searches for part of the text, she may find it. Don't try to pull it down and pretend it was never published. Things on the internet are forever. - If your personal blog is family-only, consider having it password-protected instead of public. That way, you can likely get around the requirement that it not be published before; you can argue that it was just stored and submitted for peer review or something if anyone finds it. It's not available for public consumption, so I think it would be safe to say it's not published. - If you're submitting to something that doesn't pay, it will likely be less strict on publishing with multiple outlets.