Ryo Chan said:and i say again
Downloading is illegal
Owning swords is illegal
watching sky without a subscription by hacking a satelite is illegal
and how many people ever get caught without actually doing something stupid like bringing it into the public eye?
3% most. doesn't matter if they made all Cartoons on the planet illegal, they'd still end up doing very little about it
I'd imagine that anyone that is worried about the possible effects of the bill is more worried about stuff that they have imported/do import.crunchyroll said:but Maria Eagle's office did emphasise that anything currently legal would not be affected by any change of law - basically saying that if you can buy it now in a shop, it should be fine.
ilmaestro said:I'd imagine that anyone that is worried about the possible effects of the bill is more worried about stuff that they have imported/do import.crunchyroll said:but Maria Eagle's office did emphasise that anything currently legal would not be affected by any change of law - basically saying that if you can buy it now in a shop, it should be fine.
For the majority of people, yes. For the totality, no.ilmaestro said:I'd imagine that anyone that is worried about the possible effects of the bill is more worried about stuff that they have imported/do import.
fabricatedlunatic said:That sounds like exactly the sort of material that will be affected. Ostensibly underage drawings engaging in sexually explicit acts. I find it difficult to believe that the people who read Yaoi -- mostly women -- are potential paedos, but the governement clearly disagrees.
RetroRainbow said:Yaoi won't get affected, right? I read somewhere only the other day, possibly on ANN, that somebody got fined x amount of dollars for having it, and had their manga taken off them. Apparently, since the guys are drawn pretty young looking and without pubic hair, they were mistaken for being young girls.
Can't remember what exactly happened, but that was the jist of it.
crunchyroll said:To those of you who think nothing you own could be affected, because you've only bought things legally in shops and not imported etc - anyone remember the Wikipedia row from late last year? That Scorpions album cover that was confirmed as an image of child sexual abuse by the IWF? Don't forget that the CD was available on Amazon right up to the day the IWF blocked Wikipedia and still is in HMV Oxford Street! Point being, just because you can buy it in a shop doesn't mean the Police won't still consider it against the law...
crunchyroll said:Btw, I'm pretty sure Battle Royale will not come under the new law, but then once a law leaves parliament it's up to the Police and the courts to decide exactly what it means, so I'm not sure I
really believe all of Maria Eagle's reassurances
Project-2501 said:How does the IWF blocking a site have anything to do with whats actually legal/illegal for sale? The IWF are not the police and that album had been on sale with that cover since 1976!! Banning a website with a picture of it in 2008 is a bit late really. The police had 32 years to think about it, not even they are that slow. Its a total non-story.
As for making stuff you've legally bought in shops illegal... you cannot retrospecively inforce a law in the UK, or most of the world for that matter. ie if the BBFC/OPA classed it as legal to buy previously, it will remain legal even after this bill comes into force.
"Oh sorry, actually we should never have given Elfen Lied a 15 rating, we've now decided its illegal and anyone who bought a copy will now be arrested"
But buy something from an importer/reseller (such as at the expo) or mail ordered it from overseas, well that has always been and will remain entirely at your own risk. And importing dodgey stuff has always run the risk of customs impounding it, here or in the USA. Chistopher Handley was importing and he got busted. The fact he pleaded guilty means there is a lot more to it than a few 'comic books'.
Existing sources state that it was only manga:Project-2501 said:Chistopher Handley was importing and he got busted. The fact he pleaded guilty means there is a lot more to it than a few 'comic books'.
A notable 'extreme' hentai artist has tentatively been identified as the author of at least some of the offending material.The Iowa man was accused of receiving and possessing obscene manga, as opposed to child pornography, via the United States Postal Service in May of 2006.
crunchyroll said:Well, actually the IWF blocking the site does potentially have alot to do with the legality of what is or isn't for sale. The IWF made a decision on that album cover that it was likely to be considered an image of child sexual abuse and even though they backed down on that, they did not withdraw their assertion that their assessment of it was that it was potentially illegal. As you say, the cover was available for years - this was why the IWF backed down. Still, would you go out and buy a copy now that you know that the police might percieve it as an indecent image? Just because the album remains on sale and can be purchased in a shop does not make it 'legal' as such - it would take a test case of course but although highly unlikely it's not inconceivable that this couldn't happen.
crunchyroll said:I think you're missing the wider point here - of course a law can't be made retrospectively, but this act is about possession and not publication - therefore something legally available to possess today won't necessarily be legal to possess tomorrow if it falls foul of a new law.
It's not illegal if the seller is from outside the UK.Project-2501 said:If the publication was illegal to sell you really shouldn't have bought it.
ayase said:We should be fighting against any laws which protect no-one and restrict our personal freedoms.