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      En attendant le film SPY x FAMILY, la saison 1 de l’anime arrive sur Netflix

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · 2 days ago - 14:31

    Spy X Family Forger

    La famille Forger débarque sur le service de streaming juste à temps pour une séance de rattrapage à l'approche du long métrage en salles.
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      Disney+ s’offre un anime mythique et c’est une première

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Tuesday, 19 March - 11:06

    Macross Disney Plus Catalogue (1)

    La plateforme continue de miser sur les productions nipponnes pour diversifier son catalogue. Disney+ s'offre l'exclusivité mondiale de la franchise Macross. C'est une première.
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      Contact publication

      pubsub.blastersklan.com / slashdot · Saturday, 9 March - 10:18 edit · 1 minute

    Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from The Guardian: Akira Toriyama, the influential Japanese manga artist who created the Dragon Ball series, has died at the age of 68. He died on March 1 from an acute subdural haematoma. The news was confirmed by Bird Studio, the manga company that Toriyama founded in 1983. "It's our deep regret that he still had several works in the middle of creation with great enthusiasm," the studio wrote in a statement. "Also, he would have many more things to achieve." The studio remembered his "unique world of creation". "He has left many manga titles and works of art to this world," the statement read. "Thanks to the support of so many people around the world, he has been able to continue his creative activities for over 45 years." [...] Based on an earlier work titled Dragon Boy, Dragon Ball was serialized in 519 chapters in Weekly Shonen Jump from 1984 to 1995 and birthed a blockbuster franchise including an English-language comic book series, five distinct television adaptation -- with Dragon Ball Z the most familiar to western audiences -- and spin-offs, over 20 different films and a vast array of video games. The series -- a kung fu take on the shonen (or young adult) manga genre -- drew from Chinese and Hong Kong action films as well as Japanese folklore. It introduced audiences to the now-instantly familiar Son Goku -- a young martial arts trainee searching for seven magical orbs that will summon a mystical dragon -- as well as his ragtag gang of allies and enemies. You can learn more about Toriyama via the Dragon Ball Wiki. The Associated Press, Washington Post, and New York Times, among others, have all reported on his passing.

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

    Akira Toriyama, Creator of Dragon Ball Manga Series, Dies Aged 68
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      China Sentences Pirate Site Operators, Huge Win For Japan’s Anime Industry

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 4 March - 10:30 · 4 minutes

    b9good-s Anime piracy site B9Good first appeared way back in 2008, initially operating under B9DM branding. Defying the usual odds, 15 years later the site was still alive and kicking.

    Last March, Japan-based anti-piracy group CODA reported an estimate of B9Good’s traffic for the two years running up to February 2023. Based in China, the site had been accessed more than 300 million times and, crucially, around 95% of those visits came from Japan, mostly seeking access to Japanese content.

    The China Complication

    Rightsholders based outside China have long complained that tackling infringers inside the country can be extremely difficult. Key obstacles include safe harbors for intermediaries viewed as overprotective, and the so-called server principle , which turns on where infringing content is hosted.

    This means that when infringing apps, websites and set-top boxes linked directly to China utilize pirated content hosted overseas, foreign rightsholders have limited opportunities to enforce their rights against their operators inside the country.

    That raises the question of how Japan-based anti-piracy group CODA, representing several major Japanese anime rightsholders, were able to convince Chinese authorities to shut down B9Good, arrest its operators, and then prosecute them for criminal offenses.

    With Planning and Patience, China Became Less Complex

    After revealing a few details in 2023 when B9Good was targeted and later shut down , this morning CODA put more meat on the bones. The details arrived as part of an announcement celebrating three first-of-their-kind convictions which, seemingly for legal reasons, CODA has been sitting on for a few weeks.

    CODA says that its work against B9Good dates back to 2016 when it filed an administrative complaint in China. In response, however, a site operator referred to as ‘Man A’ implemented geo-blocking measures at B9Good, then operating as B9DM, to give the impression the site had shut down, while continuing to infringe everywhere else.

    With the launch of CODA’s International Enforcement Project (CBEP) in 2021, the anti-piracy group set out to personally identify the operators of pirate sites. After being identified in China, B9Good’s operators would soon discover that the country’s borders offered less protection than before.

    CODA Levels Up in China

    In January 2022, CODA’s Beijing office was recognized as an NGO with legitimate standing to protect the rights of its members, which include anime rightsholders Aniplex, TV Tokyo, Toei Animation, Toho, Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK), and Bandai Namco Film Works.

    CODA filed a criminal complaint with the Public Security Bureau, and starting February 14, 2023, Chinese law enforcement began rounding up the B9Good team. In Jiangsu Province, a 33-year-old unemployed man was held on suspicion of operating B9Good. He was reportedly released a month later after confessing to his involvement. That led to the authorities seizing his home.

    In the meantime, a 30-year-old woman living in Chengdu, a 38-year-old man from Shanghai, and a 34-year-old woman from Fuzhou City, were questioned at their homes. It was alleged that the women were paid by the site’s main operator to upload pirated content, while the man uploaded content to file-hosting sites to generate revenue from advertising. In total, 45,880 anime titles were made available via B9Good without permission from rightsholders.

    Taizhou People’s Court Hands Down Sentences

    On December 26, 2023, the People’s Court of Taizhou Pharmaceutical High-Tech Industrial Development Zone handed down three sentences. The main offender, Man A, was sentenced to three years in prison, suspended for three years and six months. In addition to the seizure of his home, he was fined 1.8 million yuan (38 million yen, US$253,000), an amount equivalent to the ad revenue he earned through B9Good. The conviction is now final after the appeal period ended.

    Female B, who was paid by Man A to upload pirated anime to the site, was sentenced to one year in prison, suspended for one year and six months, for copyright infringement offenses. Female D, who also received payment for uploading pirated anime, was sentenced to eight months in prison and one year’s probation.

    According to CODA, Man C, who allegedly generated revenue from pirated anime uploaded to file-hosting sites, was not sentenced. CODA doesn’t go into detail other than reporting that he was “subject to exemption measures stipulated by China’s criminal law.”

    Sentences May Disappoint, But Value Lies in Convictions

    For deterrent purposes, it’s likely that CODA would’ve preferred immediate custodial sentences, but this wasn’t simply a routine case that failed to live up to expectations. Under normal circumstances, a case like this wouldn’t have even gotten off the ground, let alone end in convictions.

    “In this judgment, the punishment was reduced to a suspended sentence and the conviction was decided based on the fact that Man A was a first-time offender and that he voluntarily confessed, acknowledged the crime, and showed a willingness to accept punishment,” CODA explains.

    “However, this is the first time that criminal penalties have been imposed on the operators and uploaders of overseas pirated sites due to an approach from Japan. CODA hopes that the recent crackdown and judgment against such malicious sites will have a significant impact on deterring the operation of similar pirated sites.

    “In response to online infringements, which are causing damage worldwide, CODA will continue to proactively develop countermeasures beyond national borders, even if their operations are based overseas, and will continue to eliminate unauthorized use of Japanese content,” CODA concludes .

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      One Punch Man : premier trailer pour la saison 3 qui arrive cette année

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Thursday, 29 February - 17:54

    One Punch Man Saison 3 Trailer

    Saitama s'est fait attendre mais s'apprête enfin à signer son retour sur nos écrans dans une troisième saison qui s'annonce épique.
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      Kaiju No. 8 : un ultime trailer dévoile la date de sortie du premier épisode

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Thursday, 29 February - 14:44

    Kaiju No 8 Trailer Sortie

    Côté japanimation, le printemps 2024 s'annonce comme une saison chargée en blockbuster, à commencer par cette nouvelle adaptation.
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      Pourquoi McDonald’s change de nom et devient WcDonald’s ?

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Thursday, 29 February - 09:19

    Wcdo

    Fan de manga et d’anime, vous avez surement déjà vu un restaurant WcDonald’s ? Cette opération marketing de McDonald’s devrait donc vous plaire !
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      Sony claims to offer subs “appropriate value” for deleting digital libraries

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 26 February - 19:42

    Luffy from One Piece smiling with a treasuer

    Enlarge / A scene from One Piece , one of the animes that Funimation has distributed. (credit: Zoro/YouTube )

    Sony is making an effort to appease customers who will lose their entire Funimation digital libraries when the anime streaming service merges into Crunchyroll. Currently, though, the company's plan for giving disappointed customers "an appropriate value" for their erased digital copies isn't very accessible or clear.

    Earlier this month, Sony-owned Funimation announced that customers' digital libraries would be unavailable starting on April 2. At that time, Funimation accounts will become Crunchyroll accounts. Sony acquired Crunchyroll in 2021, so some sort of merging of the services was expected. However, less expected was customers' lost access to online copies of beloved anime that they acquired through digital codes provided in purchased Funimation DVDs or Blu-rays. Funimation for years claimed that customers would be able to stream these copies “forever, but there are some restrictions.”

    Rahul Purini, Crunchyroll's president, explained the decision while speaking to The Verge's latest Decoder podcast , noting that the feature was incorporated into the Funimation platform.

    Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments