Bleeding Cool remains the only site to publish DC's response to comic creators over veteran comic creator Gerry Conway's concerns and allegations over ex gracia payments made to comic creators for use of their character in toys, games, films and TV shows.

Conway has now posted on Tumblr,

First, I want to thank Dan DiDio and Geoff Johns for reaching out to me yesterday, in response to last week's Tumblr post about my issues with DC Entertainment's handling of its creators equity program.

I figure, since I made this issue public, I owe it to these men to thank them publicly for their calls. I believe they're sincere in their reassurances that DC wants to do right by creators, as they both told me personally, and as Dan DiDio and Jim Lee stated in their press release yesterday. I can't imagine that Dan wanted to talk to me after I ripped into DC in such a public way, but he was incredibly nice, and I truly appreciate his kind and thoughtful words. Ditto for Geoff, who's always been very generous to me– starting when we shared a stage at a convention in Gijon, Spain almost fourteen years ago.

Good people, both of them. I believe they're going to make a valiant effort to clarify and strengthen DC's approach to creators' equity. As I told Dan in a follow up email, since I complained loudly about DC's current policy, it's only fair that I offer some practical suggestions (and not just incessant negative whining, which I'm all too good at).

So, here we go, two suggestions to help DC address the issue of creator equity, offered in a spirit of cooperation and in appreciation of Dan and Geoff's generous effort at outreach. (I'm really, really impressed they didn't just tell me to jump off Gotham Bridge.)

First, DC could clearly articulate its policy for compensating creators of both original and derivative characters. (Apparently DC does have a policy to compensate creators of derivative characters like Caitlin Snow and Jason Todd, something I was unaware of; I'm still not certain how it works.) If DC wants to keep "derivative" characters out of the equity program, it could articulate a simple and consistent principle for how creators of derivative characters will be compensated.

Second, DC could accept responsibility to proactively offer equity contracts for original characters used in other media. Right now it's up to creators to contact DC. Make it DC's policy to take charge of this. That information is easily accessible both on the public Internet and in DC's own corporate records. DC can track character use and make sure all creators of original characters are offered an equity contract as soon as DC becomes aware the character will appear in another medium — either as a toy, or in a video game, or in a film or movie or a book. It's the right thing to do, and from a public relations point of view, it's just good corporate policy.

I truly believe Dan and Geoff and Jim Lee and Diane Nelson all want to do right by DC's creators. Sometimes corporate policy takes on an inertia of its own separate from the people guiding it. There's no ill will in cases like this: it's hard to stay on top of everything, and often the people who are charged with executing a policy aren't aware of what the people who instituted the policy really want to accomplish.

(That's what leads to a lot of government scandals, after all. Good intentions filtered through bureaucratic misinterpretation.)

It's up to us – creators and fans – to alert the policy makers when their policies aren't working the way they intend.

Corporations move slowly and inexorably in predetermined paths, much like cruise ships. It's hard to make them change course dramatically. But a small change can have a great effect. Just ask the passengers of the Titanic. If someone had alerted the crew to alter course by one small degree, it would have missed that iceberg by a mile.