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Thread: Japan asks the US to stop illegal Net releases of Anime

  1. #1
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    Exclamation Japan asks the US to stop illegal Net releases of Anime

    The Japanese government issued a formal statement of requests to the government of the United States on regulatory reform and market competition policy on October 18, and included a request for the United States to help stop the unauthorized reproduction and distribution of Japanese animation online.

    Specifically, the formal statement mentions the spread of Japanese animation and other materials on video-sharing sites and peer-to-peer file-sharing networks.

    According to Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the distribution of copyrighted materials in the United States has increasingly damaged the creative industries of Japan. Despite frequent requests to remove unauthorized material from sites with user-submitted videos, the ministry says the fundamental problem remains unresolved for the foreseeable future.

    The ministry also says that the high legal costs and complex procedures of copyright infringement cases against peer-to-peer file-sharing are issues.

    Japanese copyright holders have been sending increasing numbers of requests to remove unauthorized material from video-sharing sites such as Google's YouTube, and anime is its own category in several sites — inside and outside the United States — that link to file-sharing networks such as BitTorrent.

    The issues in the statement of requests were discussed in the fourth Japan-U.S. Trade Forum meeting which was held on October 18 in Tokyo. More at: AA

  2. #2
    I already replied to this topic on a certain other forum, but I'll add that I don't think the U.S. will enforce this, and even if they tried, I think people would still find a way around it.

    Personally I don't see what the harm is. I think fansubs actually increase the popularity of shows, driving UP sales of DVDs. If it wasn't for fansubs, a lot of people probably wouldn't even know about many of the shows out there. Also, a lot of the people who watch fansubs wouldn't go out and buy the DVDs either way so it's not like they're losing many customers. At least, that's my opinion.

  3. Quote Originally Posted by stukasa View Post
    I already replied to this topic on a certain other forum, but I'll add that I don't think the U.S. will enforce this, and even if they tried, I think people would still find a way around it.
    US is busy protecting Brittney Spears' MP3 files from appearing on peer-to-peer network.

    Not to mention the whole Iraq/Iran business, presidential elections... etc... US is busy.. busy.. busy.
    :: I'm too ecchi for my pantsu too ecchi for my pantsu... ::

  4. #4
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    Well... the US has several concerns... specially abroad.

    Guess this won't be a short term problem for leechers.

    "Sometimes people don't see how much we need them, Until we don't need them anymore..."
    =uu= "Never wear anything that panics the neko."

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