Search

Online manga piracy surging by people stuck at home during the pandemic - Japan Today

dokdokder.blogspot.com

The New Year’s season is usually a pretty festive time in Japan. Along with late Christmas parties there are end-of-the-year parties and start-of-the-year parties. Most people also get about a week off from work straddling New Year’s Day, which they use either to travel back to their hometowns to spend time with relatives or for pleasure trips both inside Japan and abroad.

This year, though, not a whole lot of that was happening. With coronavirus infection numbers surging, people were encouraged to stay home, and apparently a lot of them kept themselves entertained by reading pirated manga online.

According to a study by Japanese publishing industry group ABJ (Authorized Books of Japan), the internet’s 10 largest manga piracy websites were accessed by users in Japan some 200 million times during December of 2020. That’s nearly three times the figure for January of 2020, which was around 72 million. “The increased amount of time people are spending at home during the pandemic is likely a factor,” said an ABJ representative, and the organization estimates the total cost of the content illegally viewed by Japanese users in December, had it been purchased instead, would have been somewhere in neighborhood of 41.4 billion yen.

While widespread piracy of anime and manga has long been an open secret in overseas fan communities, it hasn’t traditionally been a high-profile issue within Japan, particularly for manga. While prices for anime in Japan tend to be higher than officially licensed DVDs or Blu-rays overseas, manga is a fairly low-cost hobby in Japan, where weekly anthologies and collected volumes are often priced at 500 yen or less, and used volumes can be bought at second-hand stores for as little as 100 yen. But as advances in technology make it easier for pirates to set up sites, and also easier for tempted and curious individuals to find them, it seems an increasing number are finding the allure of getting something for nothing too strong to resist, even as it angers and frustrates the art’s original creators.

Source: Asahi Shimbun via Livedoor News via Otakomu

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Do you enjoy pirated anime and manga? If so, this “thank you” is not for you

-- Drink with a Japanese geisha at an online drinking party

-- Japan’s bonenkai parties are the worst thing about the end of the year. Here’s how to fix them

© SoraNews24

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"manga" - Google News
January 31, 2021 at 04:00AM
https://ift.tt/3r0o4DM

Online manga piracy surging by people stuck at home during the pandemic - Japan Today
"manga" - Google News
https://ift.tt/35pfjIn
https://ift.tt/3dvq7t1

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "Online manga piracy surging by people stuck at home during the pandemic - Japan Today"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.