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      Operation Anime Phase 2: New Anti-Piracy Crackdown Executed in Brazil

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Yesterday - 08:35 · 2 minutes

    brazil operation anime In February 2023, Brazil’s Ministry of Justice and Public Security revealed an extension to Operation 404, an ongoing anti-piracy operation to disrupt websites and apps involved in online piracy.

    The purpose of 404-offshoot Operation Anime was to “suppress crimes committed against intellectual property” with a specific focus on piracy of Japanese cartoons, better known as anime. Several sites were shut down including goyabu.com and animeyabu.com.

    Close to a year later, the Ministry of Justice has confirmed a new phase of Operation Anime with a new partner appearing for the first time in 2024.

    Operation Anime Phase 2: Japan Joined By Korea

    The announcement confirms that the goal of Operation Anime Phase 2 remains unchanged for 2024 and Japan-based anti-piracy group Content Overseas Distribution Association ( CODA ) still features prominently.

    A change comes in the form of a new partner, South Korea-based Copyright Overseas Promotion Association ( COA ), which aims to suppress piracy of animated content, known locally as webtoons, on behalf of companies such as Kakao, Webtoon, and many others .

    In the latest operation, authorities in Brazil report that police in five regions – Alagoas, Ceará, Minas Gerais, Rio Grande do Sul, and São Paulo – executed 11 home search and seizure warrants this week. The objective was to seize computer equipment containing evidence to show involvement in intellectual property crimes.

    The Ministry of Justice reports that two websites were “blocked and/or suspended” but didn’t officially name either. Based on information obtained from other sources, at this point, we feel confident enough to name one as definitely shut down

    Animetvonline.cx

    The search and seizure warrants covering Ceará were coordinated by the Cybercrime Repression Police Station (DRCC), with support from the Operational Center of the Specialized Judiciary Police Department (DPJE) and the Crateús Regional Police Station.

    The target was a 26-year-old man, alleged to be the operator of a pirate site receiving around 1.2 million visitors per month. At the man’s home in Planalto Crateús, police seized cell phones, computers, hard drives, and other IT equipment.

    As data from SimilarWeb shows, Animetvonline.cx had around 1.2m visits per month. In Google search, the site is now listed as “closed due to copyright infringement” and if one clicks through, a seizure banner hosted on CODA’s website confirms it ran into terminal trouble.

    With animetvonline.cx as a starting point, other domains start to show up that also appear to have been seized. They include animetvonline.xyz (zero traffic), animesbr.cc (3.4m), animesone.cc (60K), and animesonline.one (zero). These have links to animetvonline.cx but exactly when they were seized isn’t clear.

    Other information points to the shutdown of anime.vision and potentially a handful of others, but there’s not enough solid evidence to show anything beyond coincidental downtime.

    The action was coordinated by the Directorate of Integrated Operations and Intelligence (Diopi), through the Cyber ​​Operations Laboratory (Ciberlab), of the Ministry of Justice and Public Security (MJSP).

    CODA and COA signed a memorandum of understanding in December 2017 and have been working together ever since to protect content overseas, including in Brazil.

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

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      Critique Nicky Larson : enfin un film City Hunter qui ne craint personne ? DIRECT HIT

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · 5 days ago - 17:04

    Nicky1

    Poursuivant sa stratégie d'adaptation des œuvres venues du Japon, Netflix délaisse un temps les séries pour s'attaquer à un film en live action du plus célèbre des nettoyeurs : City Hunter. Ce Nicky Larson a-t-il le 357 Magnum bien chargé ?
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      Si vous aimez L’Attaque des Titans et Godzilla, ce nouvel anime est pour vous

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Friday, 12 April - 13:28

    Kaiju 8

    Avec une sortie prévue demain sur Crunchyroll, Kaiju No 8 fracasse nos idées reçues sur les histoires de monstres.
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      Japan’s 2 Trillion Yen Manga & Anime Piracy War Gets New Hollywood Backing

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 8 April - 06:48 · 6 minutes

    coda-logo-2024 Anti-piracy organization CODA (Content Overseas Distribution Association) is a permanent fixture on the front lines of Japan’s war against online piracy.

    CODA represents the interests of around 30 corporate entities doing business in the publishing, media, movie, music, and wider entertainment industries. Members include publishers Kadokawa, Shueisha, Kodansha, and Shogakukan, through to videogame/publishing giants Square Enix and Bandai Namco. From the broadcasting sector, there’s NHK, Nippon, and Nikkatsu, to name just a few.

    While these names represent just a sample of the individual companies represented by CODA, the anti-piracy group also has around ten ‘organizational’ members. These are trade groups in their own right and have members of their own.

    They include the Japan Satellite Broadcasting Association, Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan, Japan Video Software Association, Japan Magazine Publishers Association, Association of Japanese Animations, plus several others involved in the videogame, software, and content protection legal sectors.

    Popularity of Japanese Content Fuels Massive Levels of Piracy

    The scale of the content protection challenge faced by CODA is difficult to overstate. The anti-piracy group is refreshingly open with its research and data, which as an observer makes it easier to connect with and appreciate the big numbers, rather than simply reciting them without relevant context.

    Japan’s online piracy issues are a constant, much as they are in any other country, but more recent estimates reveal illicit consumption’s startling growth.

    A major problem estimated to be worth less than 500 billion yen (US$3.3bn) back in 2019 took just three years to transform itself into a ~2 trillion yen ($13.2bn) piracy nightmare. Videogame piracy skyrocketed in the period leading to 2022, but it’s the products of the publishing and film industries that attract the lion’s share of all piracy, much of it taking place and directed from overseas.

    CODA & MPA Officially Extend 10-Year Anti-Piracy Partnership

    On March 20, 2014, CODA and the Motion Picture Association (MPA) signed an agreement to develop new strategies to tackle online copyright infringement worldwide, and to strengthen their joint copyright protection activities. The agreement, renewed another five times since then, has just reached its 10th anniversary and the event was marked with another renewal.

    Last week at MPA headquarters in Washington, D.C., CODA and the Motion Picture Association signed an official memorandum of understanding (MOU) to extend the term of their agreement until 2026.

    “On the day, MPA’s Karin Temple (Senior Executive Vice President and Global General Counsel) and CODA’s Representative Director Takeo Goto signed the agreement, and at the signing ceremony, each pledged further collaboration,” a CODA statement reads.

    Image credit: CODA cod-mpa-mou

    “CODA and MPA began a business partnership in 2005 to combat physical piracy in the Asian region, and have since built a strong partnership by signing a 10-year MOU starting in 2014. CODA and MPA’s joint enforcement efforts have achieved great results, including implementing many anti-piracy measures in the Asia-Pacific and beyond, resulting in tens of thousands of crackdowns.”

    Joint Success, Massive Budget Disparities

    CODA data shows that from January 2005 to March 2023, collaboration with the MPA generated thousands of enforcement cases. In China, 13,820 cases led to the arrest of 304 people, in Hong Kong 1,318 cases led to 1,275 arrests, and in Taiwan, 2,233 people were arrested as part of 2,215 enforcement operations.

    From physical piracy operations to more recent actions targeting pirate IPTV in Taiwan, CODA deals with problems wherever it finds them.

    Image credit: CODA coda-taiwan

    A major issue faced by CODA relates to its budget for overseas anti-piracy enforcement. Funding for overseas anti-piracy efforts is allocated as a proportion of overseas sales and CODA’s members simply don’t do enough overseas business to compete with the MPA, CODA explains.

    Annual dues for the six major studios for piracy-fighting actions carried out by the MPA total $50m. CODA says that Disney’s sales alone out-volume the combined sales of Toei, Toho, Shochiku, and Kadokawa, at a rate of 16 to 1.

    Given the disparity, the opportunity to conduct joint enforcement work with the MPA is clearly a massive boost for CODA’s members. At a time when Japanese content is in demand like never before in overseas markets, it’s especially important. As the market stands right now, however, only a minority of overseas consumers actually pay for it.

    Enforcement Challenges Broadly Mimic Those of the MPA

    In a presentation slide, CODA highlights how a typical pirate can operate if the operator wishes to remain anonymous. The original slide ‘The dark side of identifying operators of pirated sites’ is entirely in Japanese so here we’ve made best efforts to provide a like-for-like translation.

    Some nuance may have been lost, but the common theme is undoubtedly a lack of ‘know your customer’ regimes from domain registration, to server rental, through to use of a CDN such as Cloudflare.

    Image credit: CODA coda-ap-issues

    Considered a major irritant, the Njalla domain service is called out alongside Cloudflare.

    “Began operations in April 2017. Sells ‘complete anonymity’. Founded by Peter Sunde, co-founder of The Pirate Bay. Users buy the rights to use domains purchased by Njalla. Njalla is the owner of the domain, Njalla does not disclose [user identities],” CODA writes.

    “[Cloudflare] operates a distributed server system (user servers are hard to find). When Cloudflare discloses information, the site operator is also notified to that effect. The operator immediately moves the server,” the anti-piracy group contiues, adding:

    “If you have basic knowledge of the Internet and can read and write simple English, you can operate a completely anonymous pirate site!”

    Takedown Compliance: The Winner is….

    In common with many anti-piracy groups, CODA sends large numbers of DMCA-style takedown notices to platforms including YouTube, Facebook, Daily Motion, and sundry local equivalents.

    The data shows that CODA achieves a very high rate of compliance, in many cases above 99%. (Original slide in Japanese, our translations appear inside square brackets [ ])

    Image credit: CODA CODA-takedown results

    Whether that’s due to CODA’s high-level accuracy (our knowledge of CODA suggests that they take accuracy very seriously) or adherence to strict local law, or even a combination of both, isn’t immediately clear. However, the stand-out figures here are returned by MEGA; every piece of content CODA asked MEGA to remove, was removed, earning the company a 100% compliance rate.

    For reference, CODA’s members and their lines of business are listed below.
    (Note: some companies may span more than one category but here they are listed only once)

    ### Anime and Entertainment Production
    1. Aniplex Inc.
    2. Cygames, Inc.
    3. KADOKAWA CORPORATION
    4. King Record Co., Ltd.
    5. SHUEISHA Inc.
    6. SHOGAKUKAN Inc.
    7. Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions Co., Ltd.
    8. SQUARE ENIX CO., LTD.
    9. STUDIO GHIBLI INC.
    10. TOEI ANIMATION CO., LTD.
    11. TMS ENTERTAINMENT CO., LTD.

    ### Publishing and Media
    12. ADK Emotions Inc.
    13. KODANSHA LTD.
    14. Nikkatsu Corporation
    15. Nippon Television Network Corporation
    16. Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK)
    17. Shochiku Co., Ltd.
    18. TOKYO BROADCASTING SYSTEM TELEVISION, INC.
    19. TV Asahi Corporation
    20. TV TOKYO Corporation
    21. YOMIURI TELECASTING CORPORATION
    22. WOWOW Inc.

    ### Film Production and Distribution
    23. Happinet Phantom Studios Corporation
    24. TOEI COMPANY, LTD.
    25. TOHO CO., LTD.
    26. Bandai Namco Filmworks Inc.

    ### Music and Record Labels
    27. Avex Inc.
    28. King Record Co., Ltd.
    29. PONY CANYON INC.
    30. UNIVERSAL MUSIC LLC

    ### Broadcasting
    31. Fuji Television Network, Inc.

    ### Miscellaneous
    32. FWD Inc. (Various services)
    33. YOSHIMOTO KOGYO HOLDINGS CO., LTD. (Entertainment management and production)

    Organizational members of CODA listed by category

    ### Media and Entertainment Associations
    1. Japan Satellite Broadcasting Association
    2. Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan
    3. Japan Video Software Association
    4. Japan Magazine Publishers Association
    5. The Association of Japanese Animations

    ### Gaming and Software
    6. Computer Entertainment Supplier’s Association
    7. Association of Copyright for Computer Software
    8. Digital Content Association of Japan

    ### Intellectual Property and Legal
    9. Japan Patent Attorneys Association

    ### Anti-Counterfeiting
    10. Anti-Counterfeiting Association

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

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      Fallout to Baby Reindeer: the seven best shows to stream on TV this week

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 5 April - 06:00


    The post-apocalyptic gaming classic becomes an intelligent, sneakily funny thriller, while Netflix offer a compelling stalker drama with a difference

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

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 27 March - 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