Tag Archives: manga

Search Engine Baidu Runs Into Copyright Issues


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BaiduChinese search engine Baidu is running into issues as it expands it’s services outside of the Chinese borders.  The search engine includes a file-sharing service where users can upload and download files.  Japanese publishing firms have decided to set their sites on Baidu.jp which has some manga titles available through the file-sharing service.

Publisher Kodansha is demanding Baidu remove the items or face legal action.  Baidu has said it is verifying and deleting any material that violates local copyright law.  The company says the uploads violate their terms of service.

This isn’t the first time Baidu has run into problems.  Chinese net censors blocked access to the service after it was discovered you could access and download pornographic material.  China is a bit strict about accessing that content, among other things.

Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly Passes Censorship Law


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Shintaro IshiharaThe Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly has passed a law that will restrict content for manga and anime.  The law amends the Youth Healthy Development Ordinance and requires the industry to regulate anime or manga that “unjustifiably glorify or exaggerate certain sexual acts.”  Voluntary self-regulation begins April 1, 2011.  Restrictions on sale or rental take effect on July 1st.

The bill was first rejected but Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara insisted he’d push the legislation through after some revision.  This legislation specifically targets anime and manga and exempts real-life photography.  Ishihara who’s playing “think about the children” games also hates the gays, stating:

Gays are appearing on television no problem.  Japan is going way unchecked.  I’m doing this with a sense of duty.

Some speculate this is the first step for greater censorship.  Ishihara has made other idiotic statements, not just limited to gay bashing.  From Kotaku:

Regardless, this is hardly the first time Ishihara shot off his mouth. Here is a man who was sued for calling French a “failed language”, a man who referred to Korean-Japanese and Taiwanese-Japanese as sangokujin, a man who blames Chinese and Africans for increased crime and a man who denounced The Rape of Nanking as “fiction” created by the Chinese in a Japanese magazine.

But of course what would a politician be without hypocrisy mixed in with their actions.

In 1955, a 23-year-old Ishihara won Japan’s most prestigious literary award with his novel Season of the Sun. The book depicted the country’s post-War rebellious youth culture: gambling, fighting and having sex. In its day, the novel’s frank depiction of sexuality shocked readers — yet, here Ishihara is decades later trying to tell other artists what they can and cannot do.

A film was made in 1956 staring Ishihara’s brother.

Ten of the largest companies, Kadokawa Shoten, Shueisha, Kodansha, Akita Shoten, Hakusensha, Shogakukan, Shonen Gahousha, Shinchosa, Futubasha and LEED, announced that they will boycott the Tokyo Anime Fair as a result of the new law.  Ishihara chairs the executive committee.

As The Comics Journal points out it’s still legal to possess child pornography in Japan, live-action or illustrated.

This is take two of the Comics Code here in the United States in 1950.  The “regulations” forced the closures of many companies for their depictions and material they covered.

Preview – Tenken


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This video really sums up this beautiful Japanese comic we came across at this years New York Comic Con.  Expect a review on Tenken in the next week.

The world has been annihilated and an evil bestial deity must be appeased.  Saki, a young girl, trying to escape destiny, finds refuge in an unusual and rough line of work.  But she has been chosen for an unthinkable role; a princess must be sacrificed to the monster Yamatano-Orochi at the 50 year Tenken Festival.  Can Manaka, the man who is in love with her, follow her into this abyss to save her from fate; only to discover the dark secret of the ceremony?

Winner of the prestigious Japan Media Festival Arts Award this stunning work of graphical fiction takes the reader into a whole new realm.  Combining Japanese mythology in a post apocalyptic setting this book presents a new style of Japanese manga.

TokyoPop Hits the Road to Promote Manga


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Manga has hit hard times with sales down forcing layoffs in some the various companies that deal with the comic form.  TokyoPop is making moves to spread the word about Manga with a bus tour across America.  The TokyoPop Tour began in early July at the Los Angeles’s Anime Expo.  The tour ends in Chicago in August after hitting 28 cities in 54 days.

Steve Levy the CEO and COO of the company laid out why he’s making the trip:

The goals are simple: To reach out to fans nationwide to meet them and see how ‘otaku culture’ in America has evolved.

The tour is being taped with numerous updates chronicling the adventure.  The trip also includes six college students selected via audition, and an ongoing quest and contest to find “America’s Greatest Otaku.”

In a way this trip brings these comics full circle in their spread through American culture.  Manga has been an underground fascination for years and relied on word of mouth for fans to learn about the latest series or video and also the sellers to tell us the fans what we should buy.

In recent years the internet has allowed fandom to run rampant, making promotions lazy and instead rely on the pockets of the consumers to spread the word of what’s new.  With an economic collapse those pockets are empty leaving purchasing to shrivel and word of mouth to begin to flow slower.

A bus tour recreates the success of good grassroots word of mouth marketing getting the salesmen back to the streets to directly interact with their audience.  This is a lesson quite a few in the industry can learn from.

Another Pirate Site Goes Down


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The pirate website manga.com is doing an impressive thing and abiding by publishers wishes by removing all scanned material from it’s website.  They’ve posted a notice stating:

this is the last week of manga reading on One Manga (!!). Manga publishers have recently changed their stance on manga scanlations and made it clear that they no longer approve of it. We have decided to abide by their wishes, and remove all manga content (regardless of licensing status) from the site. The removal of content will happen gradually (so you can at least finish some of the outstanding reading you have), but we expect all content to be gone by early next week (RIP OM July 2010).

The website had an estimated 4.2 million unique visitors per month and a mammoth 1.1 billion page views per month.  Recently a multi-national coalition formed to combat the rampant illegal sharing of comic books online.

This crack down also comes when Manga sales have cooled.

Tokyopop Teams With Zinio


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Another day, another digital comic book announcement.  This time Tokyopop and Zinio are teaming up to distribute funny books through the tubes.  The lineup includes mostly OEL, such as Earthlight, The Dreaming and Van Von Hunter, and manhwa — The Tarot Cafe — although a few manga titles will be available soon. Books will sell for $5.99, cheaper than the print version but more than a comic book.

I’ve used Zinio in the past and it’s decent.  The program is flash based though, so tough luck to you Apple fans out there.

Below is the press release:

TOKYOPOP, the leader of the global manga revolution, and Zinio, the world’s top digital publishing distribution service, today announced a partnership that offers more than fifty volumes of manga, available immediately for digital download to your PC and Mac by visiting http://www.Zinio.com/tokyopop.

The debut list of titles for sale includes the bestsellers Bizenghast, Dramacon, and Princess Ai; manga-adapted-to-film series such as The Dreaming and Van Von Hunter; the groundbreaking shonen-ai hit Gravitation, and Jim Henson’s Return to Labyrinth and Legends of the Dark Crystal. Release dates for future titles, including Min-Woo Hyung’s Priest, inspiration for the Spring 2011 3-D film from Sony/Screen Gems, will be announced and made available for digital download soon.

Stu Levy, TOKYOPOP’s founder, producer of the upcoming films Priest and The Dreaming and director of Van Von Hunter, each based on the company’s manga series, says, “I have always been a strong advocate for digital-in fact, my DNA is made entirely from 0’s and 1’s. The manga lifestyle is rapidly moving online and we are committed to finding the best experience possible in that medium. Zinio offers the top online reading experience, and their team is committed to providing a 360º accessibility.”

For consumers, Zinio enables the ability to shop for, search inside, read, share, and save digital content to your computer. Similar to thumbing through the print edition at a local bookstore, readers of TOKYOPOP digital versions can preview pages of each manga, free of charge.

“More than a decade ago, TOKYOPOP introduced manga to America, building a category that has been embraced by millions of teens,” says Rich Maggiotto, President & CEO, Zinio. “We’re thrilled to have a partnership that will offer loyal and new manga readers these digital editions.”

Initially, most manga on the launch list will sell for a material discount, $5.99 per volume, while some larger volumes, such as the Gravitation collection–a two-volume omnibus edition–are priced at $7.99. For a complete list of titles, please visit http://www.Zinio.com/tokyopop.

Multi-National Manga Anti-Piracy Coalition Formed

Official Press Release

Media Release — Today a coalition of Japanese and U.S. publishers announced a coordinated effort to combat a rampant and growing problem of internet piracy plaguing the manga industry. “Scanlation,” as this form of piracy has come to be known, refers to the unauthorized digital scanning and translation of manga material that is subsequently posted to the internet without the consent of copyright holders or their licensees. According to the coalition, the problem has reached a point where “scanlation aggregator” sites now host thousands of pirated titles, earning ad revenue and/or membership dues at creators’ expense while simultaneously undermining foreign licensing opportunities and unlawfully cannibalizing legitimate sales. Worse still, this pirated material is already making its way to smartphones and other wireless devices, like the iPhone and iPad, through apps that exist solely to link to and republish the content of scanlation sites.

Participants in the coalition include the 36 members of Japan’s Digital Comic Association, Square Enix, VIZ Media, TOKYOPOP, Vertical, Inc., the Tuttle-Mori Agency and Yen Press. Working together, the membership of the coalition will actively seek legal remedies to this intellectual property theft against those sites that fail to voluntarily cease their illegal appropriation of this material.

“It is unfortunate that this action has become necessary,” said a spokesperson for the group. “However, to protect the intellectual property rights of our creators and the overall health of our industry, we are left with no other alternative but to take aggressive action. It is our sincere hope that offending sites will take it upon themselves to immediately cease their activities. Where this is not the case, however, we will seek injunctive relief and statutory damages. We will also report offending sites to federal authorities, including the anti-piracy units of the Justice Department, local law enforcement agencies and FBI.”

The coalition stated that it has currently identified thirty sites targeted for action.

Participant members of the Digital Comic Association include: Akane Shinsha, Akita Shoten, ASCII Media Works, East Press, Ichijinsha, Enterbrain, Okura Shuppan, Ohzora Shuppan, Gakken, Kadokawa Shoten, Gentosha Comics, Kodansha, Jitsugyo No Nihonsha, Shueisha, Junet, Shogakukan, Shogakukan Shueisha Production, Shodensha, Shonen Gahosha, Shinshokan, Shinchosa, Take Shobo, Tatsumi Shuppan, Tokuma Shoten, Nihon Bungeisha, Hakusensha, Fujimi Shobo, Fusosha, Futabasha, France Shoin, Bunkasha, Houbunsha, Magazine House, Media Factory, Leed sha, Libre Shuppan.

See-Ya to DC’s CMX


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Effective July 1st DC will be shutting down it’s manga imprint CMX.  The company will stop publishing all CMX titles other than Megatokyo, its OEL title, which will continue under the DC Comics imprint.  It’s unclear what will happen to publishing rights to these series as DC has stated “no comment” when asked about that.

In a statement on the shutdown, DC Co-publishers Dan Didio and Jim Lee said

Over the course of the last six years, CMX has brought a diverse list of titles to America and we value the books and creators that we helped introduce to a new audience. Given the challenges that manga is facing in the American marketplace, we have decided that CMX will cease publishing new titles as of July 1, 2010.

This is another setback for DC’s imprints.  It’s female focused Minx unit was closed in 2008.

The company provided a list of CMX’s June titles, the final releases from the company:

May 26 ship, 6/23 in store

Musashi #9 Vol 17

Venus Capriccio Vol 4

Two Flowers for the Dragon Vol 6

Polyphonica: Cardinal Crimson Vol 1

June 2 ship, 6/30 in store

Stolen Hearts Vol 2

Teru Teru X Shonen Vol 7

Orfina Vol 8

Viz Media, a company solely focused on manga reduced their workforce by 40% which goes to show the market has been brutal for that sector of the industry.

Green Comics – Manga Farming


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File this one under different.  As posted at PinkTenticle, Tokyo based artist Koshi Kawachi recently demonstrated his “Manga Farming” technique.  The artist is using old manga as a growing medium for vegetables.  If you’re in Japan you can see the technique at the Matsuzakaya department store in Nagoya where an installation of radish sprouts is on display.

Manga Farming

Tokyo To Restrict And Ban Sexual Comic Books


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Here’s news we didn’t expect to ever hear.  On Friday, the Tokyo city council is meeting and will vote on a new law that will force manga and anime publishers not to sell works in the city’s provinces depicting sexual situations involving minors while restricting the access of minors to work that depicts “harmful materials” or “noxious publications” – rape and other violence. The law has been supported by radical mayor Shintaro Ishihara.  A rather amazing turn of events in a society that’s stereotype is they are tolerant of such material.

It wasn’t too long ago that here in the United States Christoipher Handley of Iowa pleaded guilty of possession of  “obscene” manga as part of a plea bargain.  He was sentended to six months jail for purchasing a small number of such comics.

Numerous of manga creators have protested this piece of legislation of which the Anime News Network is keeping a list.

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