black1blade
Thousand Master
I have a rule that I can only pirate something once. Since I love re-watching stuff, it's a good insentive
Lutga said:The irony now of course is that many 'fansubs' these days are just rips from Crunchyroll etc.
Also, do people actually still maintain whole hard drives of illegally downloaded rips? Remember how iTunes libraries were supplanted by Spotify - everything moves on.
IncendiaryLemon said:I don't think people are giving people money for bootlegs.
black1blade said:I have a rule that I can only pirate something once. Since I love re-watching stuff, it's a good insentive
Lutga said:The irony now of course is that many 'fansubs' these days are just rips from Crunchyroll etc.
Also, do people actually still maintain whole hard drives of illegally downloaded rips? Remember how iTunes libraries were supplanted by Spotify - everything moves on.
ayase said:Not in agreement with one of Greg's final summaries I'm afraid HdE, like I say I don't buy the slippery slope argument that once people start downloading illegally they stop buying and I think the statement "You either have ethics or you don't" is ultimately meaningless because of the subjective nature of morality.
ayase said:It's also interesting to note how things have moved on now nearly eight years have passed - Those sites he mentioned with disdain right at the beginning that charged people for viewing fansubs and rips (and were therefore little different to bootleggers)? Whatever people's view of them now, let's not forget that one of those was Crunchyroll.
HdE said:IncendiaryLemon said:I don't think people are giving people money for bootlegs.
Oddly enough, I had an experience recently which pretty much proves to me that they are.
I left a Facebook anime group recently because, in spite of protests and reporting it to group admins, one regular user was posting pictures pretty much weekly of bootleg DVDs he'd bought through Ebay.
Initially, I suspected he may simply not be aware of the nature of the material he'd bought. You'd think 160 episodes of a TV show for £20 would ring the 'too good to be true' alarm, but some folks get taken in. I mentioned the likelihood of the DVD set being bootlegged, and his response was something along lines of 'Yeah, I don't give a ****. The quality is great and I don't have hundreds of pounds to spend on cartoons.' He also mentioned that he intended to buy bootleg copies of one long running series because it was far cheaper than the official release.
Over the following weeks, he posted more photos in the group. Of hundreds of pounds worth of bootlegs.
Draw your own conclusions.
I think those parts sum up exactly why I believe morality is subjective, because it's dependant on your own personal beliefs, but that's probably a debate for an entirely different thread...HdE said:I tend to be pretty black and white on these kind of issues. To my way of thinking, morality (and it's really the moral aspect of the piracy debate that interests me) isn't subjective. If you have a clear idea of what constitutes right and wrong, especially where a matter like this is concerned, there aren't really any shades of grey or subjectivity.
Crunchyroll was originally a streaming site that allowed people to upload whatever anime they liked without the authorisation of the creators (or even the fansub groups whose subs they hosted), making HD versions available to those who "donated" to the site. They were streaming bootleggers. Then a venture capital firm invested in them which made them virtually untouchable, the Japanese thought if they couldn't beat them they'd join them and the rest is history. The obvious lesson was that crime pays. Four million dollars and more.HdE said:I struggle to remember what the deal was with Crunchyroll. Wasn't it a site that was viewed as dodgy that got repurposed into something legit with industry assistance, though?
HdE said:I'm pally with a comic store owner who has mentioned to me that, several times, he's had teenage kids come in with their parents to browse manga, only to hear their parents tell them it's 'a waste of money' to buy manga because they 'can download that one when we get home.'
He's mentioned to me that he's of a mind to start banning customers who do that. And being personally friendly with a handful of comic creators, I wish he would. When Greg says in his panel that 'artists make nothing' he's really not far off the mark. Having people effectively say they're okay with stealing the source of income from these guys is always shocking to me. I shouldn't be surprised, but it's always shocking.
Lutga said:The question, of course, is to make the legal alternative so utterly seamless that it becomes easier to do that than waste hours torrenting etc.
Rui said:Technically there is always another option, it's just that the investment of time and effort in learning enough Japanese outweighs the benefits for many ^^;
Obviously wrong, since you can invest your time and money into a plane ride and cinema ticket.Rui said:The only thing for which there is genuinely no alternative is generally day-and-date cinema broadcasts, for which foreigners are out of luck no matter how much time or money they invest.