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How To Upload Manga On Youtube

posted on by Egan Loo

Kyoto's High-Tech Criminal offense Task Strength and other law units have arrested a 14-year-one-time middle-school student on Monday for allegedly distributing Ane Piece and other manga on the YouTube website earlier the manga's official release dates. The unnamed male suspect comes from Nagoya in Aichi Prefecture southwest of Tokyo. According to the police, this is Japan's first arrest for declared copyright infringement on YouTube.

The teenager is suspected of uploading One Piece, Naruto, Major, and one other work as videos betwixt December 22, 2009 and February nine, 2010. The suspect reportedly admitted to photographing the manga, page past folio, and uploading the images every bit videos without authorisation. The police are investigating the details of how the suspect obtained the manga earlier release.

The America-based YouTube is the earth'south most-visited video-sharing website. Over ten million people use the site in Japan alone. The public relations department of Shueisha, the publisher of the Weekly Shonen Jump magazine that runs One Piece and Naruto, told the Yomiuri Shimbun paper, "These acts of copyright infringement are truly regrettable. To protect manga culture and the rights of manga creators, we're taking every available measure."

Sources: Mainichi Shimbun, Yomiuri Shimbun

Update: In May of 2007, Kyoto's High-Tech Crime Task Strength and other cooperating authorities arrested three male suspects in Tokyo, Morioka, and Osaka, and searched their homes for unauthorized file-sharing of manga before release. One of those arrested was a 17-year-old Tokyo educatee who allegedly uploaded Weekly Shonen Leap every week on the Thursday before the official Monday release date from February 15 to April 5, 2007. All three reportedly used the Winny peer-to-peer file-sharing network to distribute the scanned manga.

Japan's Copyright Law prohibits unauthorized uploaders but expressly immune people to download for private use until this year. Last June, the Japanese parliament passed an amendment that will make information technology illegal to knowingly download copyrighted material without say-so for the first time. The new law went into consequence on January 1, 2010.

The years of the alleged copyright infringement have been corrected in the article in a higher place. Thanks, Twilightmaster and Kurisu-kun.

Update 2: According to what the police force told the Sports Nippon newspaper, the suspect used the Twitter social networking site to announce the iv times he is known to have uploaded manga.

Update iii: Co-ordinate to the Asahi Shimbun paper, the fourth manga that the 14-twelvemonth-onetime suspect uploaded frame-by-frame was Gintama, another Weekly Shonen Jump manga title. Major runs in Shogakukan'south Weekly Shonen Sunday magazine.

Update four: According to the police in a Mainichi Shimbun paper report, the suspect allegedly uploaded 118 manga installments from 30 works in Weekly Shonen Bound and Weekly Shonen Sunday from December of 2009 to this month. The resulting videos were accessed over 8 meg times. The videos were commonly posted four to five days before the magazines' official release dates, although the special New Twelvemonth's problems were posted 9 days earlier.

The suspect reportedly maintained a "Netabare Jōhō Kyoku" blog and Twitter account to announce his uploads to his diverse YouTube channels. A "Manga Netabare Jōhō Kyoku" ("Manga Spoiler Intelligence Agency") blog has been shut down, simply its affiliated Twitter account and at least one YouTube aqueduct are both all the same active. 47 News reports that the blog was co-maintained by a xv-twelvemonth-old high schoolhouse freshman from the southwestern prefecture of Saga and another 14-yr-quondam middle school student from the southwestern prefecture of Okinawa. 47 News also posted a photograph of the manga magazines, notebook computers, and game consoles confiscated from the suspect's home.

Update v: According to the Sports Hochi newspaper, the Kyoto police multiplied the toll of a magazine issue (240-260 yen or Usa$2.sixty-The states$2.85) times the number of YouTube views (over viii one thousand thousand times) to estimate the amercement caused at about two billion yen (The states$22 1000000). The police force'due south damage estimate has not been verified by contained experts.

Update 6: According to the Sankei Shimbun paper's source with the investigation, the suspect said in a deposition that he wanted people to see his blogs. According to the source, the blogs earned money from advertising for hair tonics, apartment rentals, and other products and services. The suspect was allegedly able to earn over 100,000 yen (about US$i,100) this manner, and he reportedly used the funds to purchase a personal computer.


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Source: https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-06-14/14-year-old-arrested-for-leaking-manga-on-youtube

Posted by: baileyhaptiotnohns.blogspot.com

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