True, but many articles wind up on sites where bylines aren't appropriate. The customers are building
their brands and need content that fits in. For example, if you were building a site about a specific topic and wanted to create dozens of pages about the different aspects of that topic, would you want a bunch of bylined articles, which gives it a magazine-like feel, or would you want your website to be more cohesive (like a company Web site)?
Many of the customers that purchase full rights do post the bylines as well. I've sold many full rights articles and received a byline. Customers buy full rights so that they have the most control over making the content best fit their sites. They may want to have bylined articles but yet also want the right to add links, add specific keyword phrases, and so on.
It's definitely nice to get the byline as you can use the article's link in your portfolio as well as build some credibility along the way, but it's also important to realize that a good portion of the site's market wants ghostwriters, not personalities.
Welcome to the nuances of pricing articles on CC
