The Anime Community’s Leak Culture – This Week in Anime
Over the last week, a major leak seemed to stem from compromised files at Iyuno, which led to the first season of the Ranma 1/2 reboot and Terminator Zero, as well as multiple episodes of DAN DA DAN and the Gekijōban Mononoke: Karakasa movie appearing online. Nick and Steve discuss the recent leaks and how they connect to the anime community’s larger culture of speedscans and other leaked announcements.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Nick, that recent CrowdStrike fiasco really affected me. As you know, I am the guy in charge of all anime distribution ever, so keeping everything safe and secure is my number one priority. Luckily, I’ve just found a new cybersecurity expert to lead my IT department, and I’ve got a good feeling about her.
Well Steve, I’m sorry to tell you this, but you better hire a good plumber, order a bulk shipment of adult diapers, and purchase the copyright for “Ievan Polka” because the anime world has a big ol’ leak problem.
It’s not the first time an anime episode has leaked before its due date, but I’m pressed to think of a time when this much stuff was released. An entire season of that Ranma reboot is just out there, months before it was meant to be seen by anyone willing to hurt their eyes by watching something in 360p with half a dozen watermarks and timecodes. Several somebodies at some important companies have been tearing out their hair this week, lemme tell ya.
There are many questions about the “How” that we may never know. Most big companies are super cagey about their IT security, and unless a lawsuit forces them, I doubt Netflix will ever outwardly admit what happened. So instead, it may be more productive to ask, “Why?” As in, why would somebody go to the trouble of all this, and why would others want to sip up these leaks like they’re drinking out of those little bottles you put in hamster cages?
I will also cop to watching a camrip of Madoka Rebellion back in the day. At least with movies, there’s the factor of lengthy waits for overseas releases—not to mention the often unpredictable screening availabilities when they did arrive. Yet I think there’s a marked difference between watching a bootleg copy of a thing released in some official fashion and hunting down a purposefully low-quality version of something that nobody has had the chance to see yet.
I mean, I could not tell you the last time I watched an anime episode in 640×360 resolution. That’s barbaric.
That’s not all it releases; MangaPlus also has that lineup in even more territories. The important part here is the simulpub. If you’re caught up on a series, you can theoretically read it to the very end of its run—possibly years down the line—without spending a dime.
Now, would you believe me when I tell you there’s a contingent of online fans who insist this is still not fast or available enough?
It’s like spoiler culture’s evil bizarro twin. Lots of people go way overboard in avoiding anything that might resemble a spoiler, and I think that’s annoying. However, the contingent of people who seek these leaks just for some gamified sense of victory—for the cheap thrill of being “aware” of the plot as soon as humanly possible—those people are annoying, too. Everyone should be normal about it, like me.
Given how official localizations have become favored windmills for certain online cranks to tilt at, I’ve seen that slice of the audience gravitate towards these areas as well. After all, quality doesn’t matter, so long as you’re sticking it to the woke cartel ruining anime and manga with all of their pronouns and natural sentence structure.
Exactly. You can make a moral argument that it’d be better for someone to leak Coyote vs. Acme than for all of that work to evaporate into a tax write-off for David Zaslav and his obscenely rich cronies. You can’t make that same argument about DAN DA DAN, airing this October for the whole world to see.
This is our hard work.
It is meant to be released on its due date, something we, as animators, really look forward to.It is incredibly disrespectful and just straight up annoying. You think you are doing some kind of service to the community but you are not. https://t.co/UX0lCrZbuZ
— Kass Chapa・アニメーター 🇲🇽❤️🇵🇸 (@kaoyumari) August 7, 2024
Right, these aren’t faceless corporations being hurt. The response from the flesh and blood people who work on these projects is telling. For example, people who have worked on Coyote vs. Acme seem generally frustrated that it’s in boardroom limbo. The animators who have worked on these leaked anime are also upset, but conversely, it’s because the nature of the leak undermines the blood, sweat, and tears they’ve put into these shows and films. It’s all been unceremoniously dumped in barely watchable quality. I used to complain about Netflix‘s batch releases (okay, I still complain about them), but at least those weren’t covered in pixelated Vaseline, and normal people could watch them at their leisure.
Also, while the anime side of things is safer since Netflix isn’t in charge of ordering or producing more seasons, it’s worth noting how much that company, in particular, values views in the first week of release. Stuff like this has the potential to actively impede the creation of whatever gets leaked.
Hype cycles aren’t something I’m interested in or invested in, but they’re a delicate ecosystem. Granted, it’s way too early to say what kind of effect, if any, these leaks will have, but they threw a curveball that no one on the production side can be happy about.
That’s also the most cynical possible motivation for the current leak. That someone just wanted to do it for all the glory and admiration that the fine folk of 4chan have to offer.
Honestly, I’m hoping it’s for a more personal or petty reason. I would accept “did it for the lulz” over trying to get invisible internet points. It’s like robbing an art museum to get Reddit awards. The motivation is more despicable than the actual crime.
Sadly, it’s a possibility we may never be able to rule out. On the opposite side of the spectrum, I also don’t want to come across as too holier-than-thou for not engaging with these leaks myself. I’m wholly sympathetic to the plight of the animators upset by this fiasco. Still, the primary reason for my avoidance is that I simply do not have time to watch any more anime than I currently do. I’m a grown-ass adult. I have shit to do. I can’t be watching postage stamp-sized videos that are half watermarks. I have bills to pay.
I guess this boils down to this: If I’m going to drink, I’m gonna pour water from the faucet into a cup like a normal person rather than stick my head under the sink and drip feed myself from the leaky pipes. If you are seriously interested in anything leaked through this event, at least do yourself a favor and wait until there’s a proper, quality version to check out. If for no other reason than you deserve better.
Respect the artists who worked on it, and respect yourself. Even if all you want to do is snarf up slop, you shouldn’t settle for anything less than artisanally crafted slop. In at least 720p.
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