Asking for trouble again, aren’t we? This is a tournament, not bash a blog event.
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Don't give up 53rg10! I saw your post a…
Don’t give up 53rg10! I saw your post and it would be a shame to stop blogging just because you lost some silly Anime Blog Tournament. Surely, I only lost with 6 votes compared to your 21 vote gap, but there is worse things in life than losing a tournament. Giving up on blogging simply proves that you can’t take a loss as everyone can’t win all the time and that is life.
It would be sad if you stop blogging, so please don’t give it up!
Some E-Drama this morning on NotDotQ whe…
Some E-Drama this morning on NotDotQ where ghostlightning accusing Hanners for cheating…
I voted for ghostlighting, but bad sportsmanship is bad sportsmanship. Don’t take the AniBlog Tourney too seriously… It’s just for fun… that is all. It was very close, so be happy for those 300 voters that voted for you… Okay?
Those two are getting at it!
Well, it seems at mefloraine and Baka-Raptor are getting at it in the second round. Meflorine took the first shot with this parody of Baka-Raptor himself:
Firing back, Baka-Raptor with his good humor says that mefloraine is a tsundere and a lesbian?
I laughed… As long they are not saying any racial or homophobic slurs, I am okay with it… However, this makes it a very tough match, although probably the vote will go to Baka-Raptor when I start my Round 2 Part 1 voting digest tomorrow (I’m sorry mefloraine, but don’t tease me because of this… :3).
On Open the Minorigate Perhaps minori ma…
Perhaps minori may not be right when they come to exporting games and such, but in the end of the day, it is politics that drive outrageous bills that limit creativity and content just because some small group gets offended over one game and then the whole incident gets overblown. This is why we have outrageous laws that are being made in Japan because of international pressure. Other countries should stop getting into Japan’s business. It’s not your culture to stomp on. Let’s say if groups were offended over the violent games that are being made in the US and the situation is overblown that senators try to make a law to ban violent video games because of just one incident. Do you like that? Instead of complaining about why Anime is Dying, we should complain why Eroge is dying! it’s those groups that want to ban these eroge games so much that they don’t even care what other people think or even the creators. Politicians and these groups should be ashamed of themselves for letting it go so far…
On Minorigate…
On Minorigate, or, How to Piss Off Otaku Without Really Trying
Author did bring up a very good point. Minori has been overreacting way too much that they shaft everyone else who are fans of those games made by them who are outside of Japan. I blame those radical feminist groups like Feminism Now, media organizations like CNN who overblown this situation when it doesn’t need to and those left wing highly religious groups that thinks Pornography is bad. What will this lead to… censorship of content that I do not wish to see. .. I mean, violent games get passed the radar, why shouldn’t eroge if they are harmless and don’t do anything cruel or promoting cruel acts? I think we will never know…
Anime is dead? BULLSHIT!
As always, lets shove the blame as Fansubs always… and this article from Eric P. Sherman, President & CEO, Bang Zoom! Entertainment just proves that. This is what he said:
Unless YOU change. Right now. Stop stealing. If you have committed theft, robbery, shop-lifting, or just “downloading some stuff through torrent reactor,” then just stop doing it — now. You probably wouldn’t go into a supermarket and put a package of swiss cheese under your shirt and walk out without paying. Nor would you walk into Best Buy and try to walk out with Guitar Hero, bypassing the cash register. Why? Is it because you might get caught? Or are there other issues, such as standards of morality, that dictate how you live your life.
Excuse me? I buy my anime on series I like and also licensed series I want to see (and this is evident proof of it). Oh lets accuse the fansubbers who fansub all the anime that fans watch and if they like it, they go out and support the series by buying it. I think Eric’s got the mindset put in the gutter and blaming it on fansubs.
The issue is that Crunchyroll in my opinion is not a viable option as it is region locked, you can’t view the show offline and the subs are poor quality. Not only that, singles are going way out of style because they are unaffordable and people are waiting for the full boxset that would be affordable. Don’t blame it on stealing because technically downloading a fansub does not equate to any generated revenue as it was never made. Also, just recently, the US Government revealed that the estimated costs on piracy were fake, so it just proved another point I made earlier. Eric, you need to stop blaming piracy and start doing something to make Anime more available without resorting to streams that take away freedom such as selling DRM-free Anime Titles at DVD quality online for half the price of the DVD or something. How about improving the quality of the subs?
Also, do you know it is a recession going on as well? Well, lets blame it on fansubs because people can’t afford Anime because they recently lost their job or something. This is stupid…
Until you come up with a viable solution to the problem than just blaming it on fansubs, I will just ignore you and pretend that you are making a fool of yourself.
Oh, the Hypocrisy…
This bothered me this morning:
NOBODY READS MELATIVE OR TUMBLR!!! There is no need in this world for this micro-blogging nonsense
Ignorance. So if Melative and Tumblr is Microblogging, what is Twitter? Microblogging, but crippled? So by saying that Melative and Twitter is microblogging nonsense, Twitter is also nosense as well? Oh the hypocrisy… People should read the entry on Wikipedia, Twitter is obviously microblogging… So before saying something completely stupid and making a fool of yourself, research first.
Twitter sucks for Anime Microblogging
I noticed that some people actually microblog about Anime on Twitter… but it’s horrible… Why? 140 character limit and not being able to insert the whole Anime Title, episode and thoughts in one update? There is a better way to microblog Anime per episode. Use Melative. What is it? Melative is:
Melative is a web-application/service which focuses on media (and media contexts). It provides an interface for users to catalog their experiences, interact with titles, and find other users with similar interests. For developers, the API allows a simplistic, RESTful interface to meta-information resources on media-titles, creators, and more. There are many (possibly too many) features and interaction possibilities built into the API, and we are striving to provide interesting new ways in which users may express themselves when it comes to the media they enjoy.
An easy way to get into Anime Microblogging is using MelScrobble/MelscobbleX if you want to Microblog without typing the title and segment of your currently playing Anime or Melative Library if you want to manually manage your library yourself. Both of these applications are easy to set up and use… Just register for a Melative Account, follow some users and start microblogging. It is better solution to liveblog Anime than using Twitter for that, which is just lame.
Chris Beveridge, Asinine remarks and the Anime Mafia
Pete Zaitcev over at アニ・ノート in this particular post criticizes Chris Beveridge outrageous, despicable and elitist remark. He compares what Chris Beveridge refers to as “my family”, the anime industry at large to the likes of a mafia in these two statements:
Firstlly, the level of the buy-in and mental association with the industry is seriously unhealthy. Chris is equating a bunch of soulless corporations run by avowed fan-haters like Kadokawa (in Japan) and Ledford (in America) to his family. Unreal.
Secondly, you know who else conflates business and family and then promises to hurt those who cross “the family”? The mafia, of course. They are very cool on the silver screen, but in real life I know whom I choose between to sympathise between gangsters and their victims.
Let’s take away from the Anime Industry and take a close look at companies in general. In a business, the purpose for the firm is to make money, not to bend down to the fans and give what they want. If the fans don’t like it, they can vote with their dollars and don’t buy anything from them and thus cause them to go out of business. Chris Beveridge seems to be flirting with the Anime Companies and don’t give a damn about the fans nor the fansubbers he hate so much… He wants a closed garden approach where companies like Crunchyroll and company stream with subs lacking in quality and no other options for the viewers to use. The problem with pure streaming approach is that it takes the viewers control away completely. With fansubs, viewers are free to convert to any portable device or view it later. If they like the series and becomes licensed, they will buy it or even buy related merchandise. Chris Beveridge obviously wants a closed garden approach since it will protect the interest of the Anime companies and give little freedom to the customers.
Let’s compare this approach to the iPhone, AT&T’s Android Phones and Windows Phone 7 platforms. They only allow you to install any apps they approve in the app store and does not give any freedom for the user to install unsigned applications that are not in the appstore, modify the hidden settings or other stuff on the phone. Sure, there is stuff like Jailbreaking and stuff, but companies who provide these devices don’t like users to take full control of these device…
Another example… Supposed that Microsoft decides to close the Windows operating system with Windows 8 and where you can only obtain desktops and laptops that have the OS preinstalled without the ability to install other operating systems like Linux and control what approved applications you can install from their App Store. Do you think this is right? Sure it will reduce the chance of malware being installed to the system, but at the same time, it takes the user’s freedom away and introduce Digital Rights Management which is viewed as a technology that takes fair use rights away and giving in to the interest of companies.
Why did I compare unsigned applications to Fansubs? Fansubs are like unsigned applications, giving viewers more freedom and quality to what they can do with the content. With unsigned applications, they give more capabilities like customization, tethering and other sort of things that the device or the service provider fears the most.
From the examples I shown, these are the well known examples where a closed garden takes away the user’s freedom. I didn’t mention Sony’s taking away of OtherOS in their firmware update or Nintendo’s hostile approach against Wii Homebrew, but they also examples where they take a user’s freedom, but not as well known as the closed garden approach on mobile devices.
We have to know that the Anime Industry will sue anyone… not just fansubbers. Take a look at BayTSP and sending DMCA letters for select anime titles? They know that they don’t like that because they are resisting change. The main reason people are downloading fansubs because they provide better quality subs and the freedom to use on any device, which streaming cannot do. Unless they up the quality of the subs, provide karaoke for OP/ED and translation and provide downloadable episodes (DRM-free) for people to use on their devices to subscribers, I think streaming will never be a viable alternative to fansubs until licensed DVDs are released. Also, region locks are another problem with some countries as well, which can alienate viewers on countries where the stream isn’t allowed.
Pete Zaitcev is right in his criticism of Chris Beveridge’s remarks. I only care about the content, not the company it comes from. I don’t see why people should protect the companies with a passion when you damn well know that they are after your money. They don’t care what you think about them or their policies, even at the expense of the fan’s freedom. I think Chris Beveridge is wrong in his asinine comments he made on Twitter and he should rethink what he thinks about the Anime Industry before he gains a large number of enemies of disgruntled anime fans at large who clearly don’t agree with him and his despicable remarks approving a Anime Industry “walled garden.”
Notes: Even though I’m against streaming entirely because of the issues I mentioned, I urge people still to support their favorite Anime by buying the DVDs and/or related merchandise. It is only fair…