Anonymous Declares War on Japan Over Illegal Downloads

anonymous-rising-sun_0.jpg

Hacker collective Anonymous has declared open season on the Japanese government for its passage of a draconian ban on illegal downloads and ripping, briefly taking down several government websites in a series of cyber-attacks.

The “Personal Illegal Downloads Punishment Act,” was recently proposed by the opposition LDP and their cultist stooges the Koumeito, and sailed through the Diet with no debate or opposition – 221 for, versus 12 against, with only the fringe left-wing maniacs of the Communists and Social Democrats, and a single Democrat, voting against.

As might be expected, the music industry’s belief that it will miraculously boost its declining sales was the most vocally espoused argument in favour of the law.

The most significant provision of the law is to punish offences of unauthorised downloads of copyrighted commercial audiovisual content with a maximum of 2 years in jail and ¥2,000,000 in fines.

The law also bans all ripping where it involves circumventing a protection system – which, in the best tradition of poorly conceived laws, apparently manages to leave ripping audio CDs legal as there is no protection system involved, whilst banning all format shifting of DVDs and BDs.

The download portion of the law comes into effect in October, whilst the ripping ban is due in January.

Some summary points about the “illegal download” law as it is currently understood:

Downloading copyrighted material was already technically illegal since 2010, but no penalties were attached

The law only applies to commercially (paid-for) distributed copyrighted audiovisual recordings

As a result the law actually leaves games, software, manga and text out – all these are still “legal” to download illegally

There are mixed opinions as to whether “downloading” includes caching or streaming – it has been pointed out that it may well ban YouTube if it does, and the final decision probably rests with police and how much they want to arrest a given person

It is a “shinkokuzai” law – for police to act, there has to be a complaint from a victim

This means police need a specific complaint to act upon – it seems unlikely copyright holders will be able to obtain this kind of information themselves in the case of private downloads, although public downloads are another matter

However, police have shown themselves willing to independently goad copyright holders into pressing charges by providing them with information from unrelated cases

As it potentially criminalises most of the computer-using population of Japan, there is some suspicion that police intend to use their new powers either to bring additional charges against people whose computers they have seized as a matter of course, or to initiate house searches in the hopes of finding additional offences with which to charge victims.

If Japanese police follow their typical pattern of behaviour (as they have done with uploaders), they will likely not crack down hard on all downloaders and infringing sites, but instead make occasional examples of offenders, or use the law to bring extra charges against people arrested for other reasons (handy if the original charges do not stick and thought to be a means of point-scoring for officers and prosecutors) or against sites considered inconvenient.

In response to all this, Anonymous has reared its ugly head, issuing an “official” press release in which it throws down the gauntlet to the Japanese government, who are doubtless quaking in their various Tokyo mansions:

Greetings land of the rising sun, we are Anonymous.

In recent years the content industry, politicians, and governments throughout the world have dramatically increased their efforts to combat internet piracy and copyright infringement. Unfortunately in doing so they have often taken the wrong approach which has lead to draconian laws, infringements of basic rights, and severely stunting the growth of technological innovations.

Japan, home to some of the greatest technological innovations throughout history has now decided to go down the path as well and cave into the pressures of the content industry to combat piracy and copyright infringement. Earlier this week Japan approved an amendment to its copyright law which will give authorities the right to imprison citizens for up to two years simply for downloading copyrighted material

We at Anonymous believe strongly that this will result in scores of unnecessary prison sentences to numerous innocent citizens while doing little to solve the underlying problem of legitimate copyright infringement.

If this situation alone wasn’t horrible enough already, the content industry is now pushing ISPs in Japan to implement surveillance technology that will spy on and every single internet user in Japan. This would be an unprecedented approach and severely reduce the amount of privacy law abiding citizens should have in a free society.

To the government of Japan and the Recording Industry Association of Japan, you can now expect us the same way we have come to expect you in violating our basic rights to privacy and to an open internet.

We Are Anonymous
We Are Legion
We Do Not Forgive
We Do Not Forget
Expect Us

They have apparently wasted no time in making their presence felt – the websites of the Supreme Court of Japan, the Democratic Party of Japan and the Cabinet Office have all reportedly suffered DDoS attacks.


    Post Comment »
    237 Comments
    Sort by: Date | Score
    Avatar of jorge
    Comment by jorge
    00:56 27/06/2012 # ! Quality (+1.0)

    GO ANONYMOUS !!!

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:15 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.8)

    YEAH GO ME!

    Oh wait, you don't mean anonymous posters...

    Comment by Anonymous
    04:35 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.6)

    You know, posts like this actually contribute to the Anonymous collective. It builds group spirit or whatever you want to call it. Or transfers culture. It's not us being sit-in, DDOS kind of activists or anything, but those activists definitely come from within the Greater Anonymous.

    Comment by Anonymous
    06:46 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.2)

    We are not a collective. We are random fags on the Internet.

    -Anonymous

    Comment by Anonymous
    12:45 30/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    Don't put words in my mouth, and don't quote yourself, that just strange.
    alternativly: Don't quote myself, me.

    Comment by Anonymous
    03:58 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    anon is leejun XD

    Comment by Anonymous
    10:31 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    anon is leeroy jenkins

    Avatar of PhillB
    Comment by PhillB
    14:52 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    EXPECT THEM!

    Avatar of Hubbles
    Comment by Hubbles
    Comment by Anonymous
    01:14 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.8)

    lol dont worrie about it xD i remember when beta max could first record tv, ass holes was like "its illegal to tape public tv", then music tape recorders came out and the ass holes retorted "taping music off radio stations is illegal" lol after awhile no one will even give a damn.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:31 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.5)

    Jesus how old are you?

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:18 27/06/2012 # ! Drivel (-1.0)

    old enough to fuck your mother!

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:20 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.5)

    I'm 2012 years old. LOL.

    Comment by Anonymous
    04:24 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    aren't you suppose to be 2017 yrs old? since our calendar is off by 5 years and no one bothered fixing it.

    my honest opinion to anon group is maybe they're over-reacting to things, sabotaging gov website isn't going to help, do you really think those guys who pushed this law cares about broken websites?

    Comment by Anonymous
    04:57 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    old enough to sex your sister

    Avatar of Chen-04
    Comment by Chen-04
    04:59 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (-0.2)

    Wasn't our calendar off about 300 years? Someone invented 300 years of history as far as I know.

    Comment by Anonymous
    06:07 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.2)

    You can be 10 and fuck someones mother. All that requires is the ability to get an erection. Or younger if you count strapons.

    Comment by Anonymous
    09:06 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.2)

    @ anon 04:24
    "sabotaging gov website isn't going to help, do you really think those guys who pushed this law cares about broken websites"

    *sigh* why is it that so many people just can't seem to grasp the simple concept of raising awareness, and how DDoS'ing a web site is like a peaceful sit-in protest.

    The reason why DDoS attacks by Anonymous work is because the huge media appeal they have. Everyone is going to hear about it and the law experts are going to debate in TV shows and write columns in newspapers. Usually, after a few months, it results in the politicians making some kind of cop-out.

    The real question here is will it work with the very unique dynamics of Japanese society.

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:13 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    History is actually one of the most important weapons in this war.

    Everything to do with copyright infringement on those archaic devices is entirely relevant still.

    Avatar of Satonaka
    Comment by Satonaka
    03:26 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.2)

    @1:14 lol that's so true. take me for example, i didnt give a damn during the dvd era, and i sure dont give a damn now XD

    Avatar of kamehappo
    Comment by kamehappo
    03:58 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.4)

    Well said, but i remember music taping began 30+ years before video taping possibility at home, if my old memory serves me right. I bought my 1st good tape machine, an Akai M-9 in 1969 and a VHS in early 80`s. I saw first video recorders in shops 1976.
    There was tape recorders for sound available for consumers in early 1950`s.

    Comment by Anonymous
    09:34 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    There was also the Betamax Tape which was short lived.

    Avatar of Bayonette
    Comment by Bayonette
    00:59 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    I guess "Justice is served!" for the Japanese government, right?

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:19 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    Not really. A DDoS attack can be a good wake up call and can actually cause quite a bit of damage, depending on how much recources the defending party has devoted to defending their infrastructure and what the attack was aimed at.

    BUT in order to really hurt a government, you must go deeper. And that can incredibly dangerous.

    Granted, I am sure if Anon had the chance dish out some more 'high quality' hurt against any government or organisation that pissed them off, they would do it.
    Look at what happened to Stratfor. Who is going to trust them again?

    Comment by Anonymous

    Children getting excited when they never worked of their lives aren't justice.

    Comment by Anonymous
    05:01 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.4)

    It's not that simple. Entertainment needs to be dictated by the consumer and not the corporations and government.

    Comment by Anonymous

    Not by children, and children have nothing to say to adults.

    Comment by Anonymous
    18:14 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    I'm going to ignore everything else that's wrong with your comment and just point out that the identities of the attackers are unknown. For all you know, they could be older than you.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:09 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    They pwned the Jap government hard

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:12 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    INB4 2ch's idiotic racism.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:14 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.6)

    Wish they did something about imbecilic japanese censorship coming from overinterpreted pre-WW1 two-liner along the way.

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:12 28/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    This is of course the wrong place to ask a serious question, but:

    Knowing very little of Japanese history I had the impression from various scraps of info that old time Japanese were a pretty raunchy lot. Old prints are full of depictions of cocks and cunts, even in the late 1800s/early 1900s it was okay to fuck 13 year old schoolgirls (and marry them), men could have multiple wives, and general naughtiness abounded.

    I always assumed that current limits and restrictions such as pixellation of porn and black bars in hentai manga, and hands off schoolgirls was a result of post WWII puritan American influences.

    When and why did this Japanese censorship start and are there any good (english and online would be nice) references?

    Comment by Anonymous
    03:24 29/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    The crackdown on perverted stuff started back in the Meiji Restoration already. I'm not sure if current "pixelization" rules have been introduced post-WW2 or if they are just the result of a new, more rigorous interpretation influenced by America.

    As always, you can start your research at Wikipedia:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_in_Japan#Pornography
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pornography_in_Japan#Before_the_20th_century
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pornography_in_Japan#Censorship_laws
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_in_the_Empire_of_Japan

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:14 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.6)

    our hero!!!!!!!!

    Avatar of fxc2
    Comment by fxc2
    01:15 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (-0.2)

    Anybody can DDoS. Those politicians must be shaking in terror at this horrendous display or power.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:55 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.6)

    Considering they probably know almost nothing about computers, internet and alike, they likely are.

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:18 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    I doubt they use computers for anything more than email, so I wonder about its effects on Japanese politicians.

    I mean it's like filling their door lock with caulk when they always leave it unlocked. Sure it's incredibly problematic but they'll just get someone else to fix it later and then joke about it later over beer.

    Avatar of Pyrolight
    Comment by Pyrolight
    03:54 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    They don't understand it and they do not care.

    It is not their problem as it is way below their pay grade.

    Dorks on the internet cheer, the IT guys curse and the actual people targeted go home early and play some golf.

    Avatar of Kevin
    Comment by Kevin
    01:17 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    Let's just hope this isn't the end of Japan Anonymous bravery.

    Avatar of AsakuraSan
    Comment by AsakuraSan
    01:20 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.2)

    Just drop the freaking Anime Bluray prices they are so freaking ridiculous.

    Comment by Anonymous
    05:05 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    That's the point. When distribution is limited and advertisement is the means for selling the product, the cost will be higher. There's also the cost of licensing. Pretty much all the fancy ways they have of controlling you, the consumer will eventually pay for.

    Avatar of Chen-04
    Comment by Chen-04
    05:11 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    Even better. Drop blueray altogether. Downloading stuff is way better. That way you don't have to blow money into sonys ass through licence-cost-stuff for every BD bought.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:22 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.4)

    Music industry again?

    Avatar of Tobi
    Comment by Tobi
    01:24 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (-0.2)

    So many projects, so little time for Anons.

    This coming right after their stuff against the Indian government.

    Comment by Anonymous
    01:25 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (+0.4)

    what impact does this have on our lovely fansubbing groups? they risk alot more now?

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:38 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    I don't know about the direct effects, but I'm sure there will be many side and after effects. I don't know if it has any relations to this event but I already saw three of my favorite blog/site go down.

    Comment by Anonymous
    02:40 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    Not directly, but through a technical proxy. Raws attained are from Japan obviously. It needs to be on the net for fansubbers to get on it. Strictly speaking, fansub groups aren't targeted per say (not that they aren't just on the list anyway by others). So you can guess how much it could impact the fansub circle. But this basically is throwing a napalm to kill a cockroach.

    Anyone who is a resident of Japan are the real targets. The fact that it it even goes after Japanese Nationals abroad on holiday shows how ridiculous this is going to be.

    I'm glad SanCom has an article on this. Since "News" is a rare occurence in itself here haha.

    Avatar of Pyrolight
    Comment by Pyrolight
    03:46 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    As a result the law actually leaves games, software, manga and text out – all these are still “legal” to download illegally

    Basically nothing.

    Comment by Anonymous
    04:20 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    The ones subbing anime wouldn't fall into those categories though.

    Comment by Anonymous
    04:18 27/06/2012 # ! Good (+0.6)

    I hope they are not hassled. It annoys me to no end when groups (like the fan subbing groups) work hard to provide content which the distribution companies don't both making available, even though the demand is there. Fan subbing (and other groups) are doing a public service.

    Comment by Anonymous
    06:45 27/06/2012 # ! Neutral (0)

    If they don't live in Japan, precisely none. If they do live in Japan... well it depends on how much this law gets exercised.








    Post Comment »

Popular

Recent News

Recent Galleries

Recent Comments