GolGotha said:At the moment I was focusing on writing info on the streaming side of things, rather than bootleg merchandise, as that will take a bit longer, but as a lot of you will know from reading my stuff on the forum, I tend to be rather blunt...So, I will need someone to soften down my tone.
Topics I'm going to try and cover are:
What is streaming?
Where to legally stream
Why you shouldn't use illegal websites and/or download
The affect legal streaming numbers have on home releases
How much it costs to make anime
Watching anime on TV
Possible topics:
Why you shouldn't buy bootleg DVDs
How to spot bootleg DVDs
Any input on these topics would be ectremely helpful!
I hope this helps, though anyone can feel free to correct any of the stuff I've mentioned below (also my wording may be off on some points):
For 'Where to legally stream' my thread is a good help for that topic, I've covered every possible legal site so far.
For 'Why you shouldn't use illegal websites and/or download' I feel it's got something to do with this:
- Illegal sites use ad-revenue and YouTube players (with videos set to 'Private' judging by it) to stay alive. None of it goes towards the creators.
- Downloads have a combination of people who want to fansub shows because that particular show has been ignored or forgotten. While others are against certain companies like Crunchyroll and Funimation for various reasons, HorribleSubs in particular is against Crunchyroll as far as I'm aware. Stuff like this can affect the legal sites.
For 'The affect legal streaming numbers have on home releases':
- I think Aniplex, Sentai and Funimation check their streaming numbers to determine whether a show should get dubbed in English.
For 'How to spot bootleg DVDs':
- Any product sold that has 'END' (like 01-52 END) on the front cover is a bootleg, no official product does something like that.
- (UPDATED WORDING) Products with multiple descriptions in English and Cantonese/Mandarin generally are bootlegs, however the official Hong Kong and Korean versions have done this I think.
- Any product with a 'Malaysian Government approved' sticker is a bootleg, the sticker means nothing to anyone.
- If the product states it's a complete Studio Ghibli collection with every possible film released, it's a bootleg. Customers should take note that licensing restrictions can prevent certain films from appearing in one big collection. Grave of the Fireflies had some licensing issues I think which would prevent a proper collection release outside Japan.
- If they cram multiple episodes on one disc (like say 13 episodes or 5 movies) it's obvious they are bootlegs because the quality would be very low (like 240p resolution).