Japan May Make YouTube Illegal

Karloff

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Oct 19, 2009
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Japan May Make YouTube Illegal

A change in Japanese copyright laws revives bad memories of SOPA and PIPA.



When SOPA and PIPA came into being it was with a fanfare, and they went out in much the same way. They do things differently in Japan, and when the last Aum cult member - a man accused of conspiring to release Sarin nerve gas on the Tokyo subway - was arrested, among the news buried on the back pages that same day was a little-remarked item that said a revision to copyright law had been passed by the House of Representatives. The revision went through without discussion, opposition or much media coverage, and the end result is that, when the law comes into force in October, it will be illegal for Japanese citizens to watch protected material via YouTube - even if they happen to be doing it in Los Angeles.

Attorney at law Toshimitsu Dan points out that the revisions effectively make three acts illegal: ripping and copying of copy-protected and encoded materials (which are no longer covered by a personal use exemption); the sale of software and hardware that circumvents copy protection; and the intentional download of illegally uploaded materials. Or, as the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun puts it, "even one click is now a crime." Punishment includes a fine of up to about US$25,000 and/or a prison sentence of not more than two years. But the really fun part is that, thanks to some remarkably lax wording in the revision, the penalties can apply to Japanese citizens even if they don't happen to be in Japan at the time. Someone idling away on YouTube while waiting for their plane at LAX, is just as liable as someone ripping DVDs in Yokohama.

There has been no opposition to the revisions to date, and precious little public discussion. The only people who know much about it are the otaku, a subculture that is not well respected by many Japanese. This means that, come October, the revisions will become law. Arrests will no doubt follow soon afterward, and whether the accused is a pirate movie mogul or just some schlub watching smile videos on Nico Nico Douga is ultimately a matter of chance.

Source: Kotaku [http://kotaku.com/5920140/come-october-dont-use-youtube-in-japan]


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Piflik

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Feb 25, 2010
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If this law applies to Japanese outside Japan, does that equally mean that it doesn't apply to non-Japanese inside Japan?

Also...how will the know if Japanese outside Japan watch Youtube videos?
 

CrazyGirl17

I am a banana!
Sep 11, 2009
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For SHAAAME Japan! Hopefully all of the Otaku over there know of this and are trying to fight it...
 

RaikuFA

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Jun 12, 2009
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Better to read it here than on Kotaku.

"We're glad it's happening, everything from Japan sucks" Wankers.
 

Evil Smurf

Admin of Catoholics Anonymous
Nov 11, 2011
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Oh Japan, sometimes you make me confused, Now I just feel sad for you.
 

Comando96

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May 26, 2009
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rolfwesselius said:
It's japan are we honestly surprised?
Yes...

Japan may be "weird" but would you suddenly expect Japan to effectively ban all Anime clips, tribute videos?
Didn't think so...

Antonio Torrente said:
I hope this kind of stupid law will bite Japan in the ass.
It will.

Take away the Japanese peoples Anime and come next election the offending parties will sever win a seat ever again.
 

hentropy

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Feb 25, 2012
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Really this is nothing huge for Japan. "Otaku" will get mad but they take up a pretty small and disliked minority. Thing is, piracy through normal means is pretty much impossible there (no real BT or direct download sites hosted in Japan, at the very most you could find a small private community). The major media conglomerates have already been ripping down copyrighted material off of the video sites (ever tried to get a new anime/jpop music single off of youtube?). In short, not much will change other than the fact that the people doing it might now be prosecuted as a show of force and seriousness in the beginning. But the Japanese otaku have been using alternative and secure/anonymous forms of file sharing for a while now.
 

sageoftruth

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DVS BSTrD said:
So violating schoolgirl orifices is fine, but not violating copyright?
Makes sense when failing to show up in uniform means expulsion but using plagiarism for a school assignment is just fine.
 

hentropy

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Comando96 said:
rolfwesselius said:
It's japan are we honestly surprised?
Yes...

Japan may be "weird" but would you suddenly expect Japan to effectively ban all Anime clips, tribute videos?
Didn't think so...

Antonio Torrente said:
I hope this kind of stupid law will bite Japan in the ass.
It will.

Take away the Japanese peoples Anime and come next election the offending parties will sever win a seat ever again.
Most of the anime stuff you see uploaded to Youtube is done by non-Japanese. You do have some, but not that many. And if it's new and the owners have a presence in the US, they still often do issue DMCA orders.

And you seriously think anime-watchers constitute a large enough voting block to affect the elections even a little? And this isn't a matter of "taking away" anime, only taking down copyrighted stuff off of video sites. It's not really even controversial for the vast majority of citizens. Young people in general take up an increasingly small amount of the population.

captcha: know your rights