Nate (post: 1450032) wrote:I could mail a check to Sunrise saying "Here's money because I bought a used copy of your show" but that's stupid.
But yeah, I always go for torrents or download sites. Speaking of torrents, I wonder if the new Star Driver is subbed yet...and Kamen Rider. *goes off to check*
MxCake (post: 1450869) wrote: and i mean i don't see morally anything wrong is someone buys the dvd and then streams is out since he did buy the disk.(i do have a problem with people copying the first stream and then streaming it out again) im not condoning anything or saying its right or wrong just my observations and opinions
Davidizer13 (post: 1450883) wrote:I'm not sure about anime, but I know that a few gamers did this for games with excessively restrictive DRM, like Spore or Assassin's Creed 2, because the pirated version had that removed. They'd buy the retail version, and then installed the cracked version to play the game, with no restrictions on use. In the emulation scene, there's people who believe that if you own a physical copy of the game, you can legally possess it in ROM form.
None of this has actually been tested in court, though, and even if you buy the game and play the cracked version, there's still going to be a huge number of people who don't buy it, so the net effect of that piracy is that the developer loses sales (at least in the first example - emulating old games falls into the even more legally dubious category of abandonware, which is for software which the developers no longer sell or support, but is still under copyright). Even if those games didn't have the backlash against bad DRM going against them, people would still pirate them anyway, because free > paying for something.
If people can get something for free, they will, guaranteed, so to cut down on piracy, you have to provide incentives to pay for it that pirated versions won't have. This works well when you're dealing with a physical media-based model. like selling DVDs, when you have bundled extras/feelies, but breaks down when you get into the realm of downloading and streaming. The most a legal streaming site can provide is higher quality, but that gap is closing (or probably has already closed). That's what these studios and distributors are facing: a seismic shift in how they do everything, and if their non-reaction is a major element to this whole "death of the anime industry" thing.
MxCake wrote:well are you paying for torrents and free streaming?
the fans of the anime are pretty much the food providers for the artists for these animes that you download for free.
And as I've said before, Japan actually might be happier if the US anime industry tanked. The reason is, DVDs in Japan are notoriously expensive. The American licensed DVDs are much cheaper, so sometimes anime fans in Japan will import the American DVDs because of the lower pricing. This of course cuts into Japanese DVD sales, and the Japanese studios don't like that one bit.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1451042) wrote:This right here. Instead of lowering their prices, Japanese companies would rather screw their own fans AND the overseas fans in the pursuit of making money. And I'm supposed to give them my money? :\
MxCake (post: 1450869) wrote:i kinda agree to the statment that the people that make the animes need to lower there prices. it would cut down on some of the torrents if the price of the anime was lower i mean everyone cant buy 20 dollar dvds and some cant be as lucky as me to have a store that sells them for 15 bucks and then has a sale that sells them for 3rd there price >.> sorry please dont be angry i dont choose to have an awesome store where i live =3. but i digress lol. I could also get into the whole thing with piracy and if its really stealing dosint make it less illegal because to gov. makes the rules but i heard a interesting phrase that says pirating videos is like if someone took your car but your car was still there. and i mean i don't see morally anything wrong is someone buys the dvd and then streams is out since he did buy the disk.(i do have a problem with people copying the first stream and then streaming it out again) im not condoning anything or saying its right or wrong just my observations and opinions
Fish and Chips (post: 1450707) wrote:Gonzo is a Japanese animation studio, and not one of particularly noteworthy output in my opinion.
Atria35 (post: 1449973) wrote:^ Hulu, Crunchyroll, and Youtube have the legal, licensed anime. If I want to watch an unlicensed series, I must go to (insert illegal anime streaming site here) or download it.
And some of the greatest series I've watched are ones that will not be licensed
airichan623 (post: 1451351) wrote:agreement. like Kimi ni Todoke. Also licensed series that were once on tv, and aren't, or the companies arent smart enough to put up for viewing. like Code Geass R2, Gundam Seed/ Destiny (wow its mostly stupid bandai...), and shojo saturday morning classics like Cardcaptor Sakura, Tokyo Mew Mew, etc. I hate it that I ended up being born too late/ got into anime too late to watch them on tv.
airichan623 wrote:shojo saturday morning classics like Cardcaptor Sakura, Tokyo Mew Mew, etc. I hate it that I ended up being born too late/ got into anime too late to watch them on tv.
Oh, and don't forget the ones that they license but never ever do anything with!
airichan623 (post: 1451351) wrote:agreement. like Kimi ni Todoke. Also licensed series that were once on tv, and aren't, or the companies arent smart enough to put up for viewing. like Code Geass R2, Gundam Seed/ Destiny (wow its mostly stupid bandai...), and shojo saturday morning classics like Cardcaptor Sakura, Tokyo Mew Mew, etc. I hate it that I ended up being born too late/ got into anime too late to watch them on tv.
So in other words, "It's there and it's free and you can't stop me"?Nate (post: 1453958) wrote:Capitalism.
We know the artists themselves don't like it- at least one has written an article against illegal distribution of her works. [right here: [url]http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news...eos-downloads][/url]
Midori (post: 1454034) wrote:Now I wonder...is it actually possible to send plain money to the Japanese studios who do anime? If so, I think I will end up doing that some when I become financially independent. My sister's family regularly send checks to PBS after torrenting their shows because PBS accepts anonymous donations without saying a word, but I'm not so sure other companies do that. And cross-currency donations might prove difficult.
The problem with that is that the cheapness of anime DVDs in the US compared to Japan means that the studios make far less money per DVD off of US anime sales than Japan sales. Subtract the overhead of paying professional translators to translate it, and usually professional voice actors to dub it, and you don't end up with much left over.MasterDias (post: 1454041) wrote:It's far cheaper to just buy it from Funimation or whoever.
Midori wrote:So in other words, "It's there and it's free and you can't stop me"?
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