Bear in mind, this isn't sour grapes, just a decision made when I looked at where my life and priorities were right now. 
I'm going to look more in-depth at this issue very soon, but I just wanted to share with my friends and readers a portion of an e-mail I sent to one of my editors at Newsarama about my decision to no longer provide unpaid work to any site I know for a fact to be turning a profit off my efforts:
Throughout the week I've tried to contact [one of my editors] about a few things with  no success; it appears that he has decided my e-mails don't rate unless  he wants free con coverage or my help in setting up [one of their staff writers] to interview  one of my contacts. A friend of mine, union organizer and public-interest lawyer Jonathan  Tasini, has filed a lawsuit against The Huffington Post this week,  challenging their long-standing business model of making money off of  people who work for "exposure," always promising their freelancers and  contributors that there will be some eventual light at the end of the  tunnel and never coming through with a red cent. And it reminded me of  the numerous conversations that I had with [two of my editors] around last  years' New York Comic Con--[senior management]'s claims that "There'll be  paying work if you just trust us, get there, and start writing." It just  didn't feel right and I didn't know why--and then it hit me. When I  started working for Newsarama, I did so because, even though I  had a personal and financial investment in Comic Related, 'Rama was  offering me paying work at conventions and a steady gig on their blog,  which earned me street cred and free books from people eager to get  exposure. They very quickly stopped paying for anything (literally  within a couple of months after I got my first check from them, they  asked me to cover a second convention but this one they "couldn't  guarantee" any payment--ultimately none at all was forthcoming or ever  seriously discussed and I don't think I even made the show in the end) and yet I continued to write for them because,  well, it's Newsarama. But I've got a serious day job, a kid and  two graphic novels underway right now. I just can no longer see myself  contributing unpaid work to a company that doesn't give a shit about me  in exchange for free comics that come from a third party (or  several). Newsarama is never going to see another unpaid word from  me--it's just not worth my time and trouble.
