Monthly Archive for May, 2005

Fandom, Filesharing and Finances

After some very depressing reporting on the caustic soad/AcidFlask incident, Han presents his report and reflections on presentations by Larry Lessig and Joi Itou at the Alfred Deakin Innovation Lectures (2005-04-29 to 05-12).

I am in almost complete agreement with his agreement with Joi Itou’s point that file sharing can create “gained fans” and not “lost customers”. File sharing creates fans who might not otherwise even know about the anime. This increases the market for the anime. Hardcare fans are then likely to increase revenue and profits by purchasing the anime and its related goods, often through online merchants like cdjapan and Amazon.co.jp or even going to the Source (i.e. Jp). Hardcare core fans also tend to want to show their love and support for the anime, its characters, production studios, mangaka, seiyuu etc in the most powerful way by voting, capitalism-style (i.e. spending money to consume). Thus market, revenue and profits increase without the need to spend on advertising.

My views diverge at this point. Firstly, a lot of anime series are actually advertising, very compelling advertising with plots and recurrent characters. The main point is not to making money from the anime itself (pay TV subscription and DVD sales) but from the merchandising involved (e.g. all those anime with plenty of cute girls, countless robots models or monster minions). So actually file-sharing is just an unauthorised means of it achieving its objectives. Some companies might not object to the ends (more market, revenue and profits) but worry about loss of control of means (broadcast, distribution, copyright).

Secondly, companies tend to be obsessed with opportunity cost when looking at the file-sharing issue. Not everyone who downloads an AVI file of an anime will buy the DVD, even if they enjoyed the anime immensely and have great love/support/respect for the anime, its characters, production studios, mangaka, seiyuu etc. In Jp, if you buy the DVDs you’re considered a hardcore fan since you would have already probably seen it on pay TV. (In fact, it would be extremely interesting to do some proper qualitative research on what percentage of downloaders actually buy genuine after that.) Companies who naturally salivate at the thought of all that revenue that they could have gotten if all the downloaders had to pay first and this sum probably dwarfs the sum that results from fans who pay after. Counter-argument against opportunity cost is that fans who have never seen or even heard of the anime if not for file-sharing as no file sharing, no potential sales thus actually there is opportunity cost from stopping file-sharing.

The third point is an extension of the second. A lot of the argument for file-sharing creating market share lies in the inadequate and untimely process by which an anime is licensed and then distributed in countries outside Jp (after all, this issue does not even exist in Jp!) However if licensing and distribution is timely then file-sharing becomes a fairly clear-cut case of theft. There might be arguments over the poor quality of non-fansubbed subs or whether a licensee is really the license holder in your country (at least this issue exists in the minds of many Sg’rean fans) but if it is commercially available then the fansubs should be a complement to the genuine goods rather than a substitute, even you are a poor student. Thus fansub groups sometimes stop subbing and distributing after the anime is licensed in their country. They also often add a rider in their subs to urge people to stop distribution via file-sharing after the anime is licensed. Apparently the North American market has come a long way in this respect from seven to eight years ago.

Fourthly, prices also play a factor. Piracy of VCDs and DVDs of conventional movies was extremely rampant in the late 1980s and 1990s but was eventually subdued in Sg, partly due to heavy enforcement action (supply-side) but equally important, prices came down to earth (demand-side). While I was a great fan of Ghost in the Shell: Standalone Complex, the boxed set of 13 DVDs cost JPY 78,000 (SGD 1,200) without English subs! While this might be fairly priced for the Jp, it certainly won’t wash here in Sg. (This is less of an issue now, given what I see in the shops.)

In conclusion, I think file-sharing is here to stay, in a big way, until licensing and distribution is improved and pricing done fairly and sensibly. - Zyl

GAINAX Has Two Cows

Asuka n Rei in plugsuit streetwearWith the first cow, it sets off the Third Impact as the culmination of the Bovine Instrumentality Project. The milk produced cause the drinkers to have strange hallucinations and spout pseudo-Christian ramblings and bastardised Jungian pop psychology. Eventually drinkers see cows surrounding them, clapping their hooves and saying “Congratulations! Congratulations!”

After a tonne of complaints, it uses the second cow to do the same thing. Every cow in the world turns into milk when touched by a ghostly blue-furred, red-eyed cow. Except at the final stage, the cow rejects Instrumentality and the giant blue-furred, red-eyed cow breaks apart, spilling milk all over the devastated fields. The cow wakes up later, finds the red-furred cow is its only other companion, tries to strangle her before breaking down. The red-furred cow says, “I feel sick.” GAINAX continues to milk them.

And so, after a good 10 years from its release, Neon Genesis Evangelion (website, website) continues to yield plenty of milk revenue and profits for its creators. I gather that the latest DVD re-release called The Renewal of Evangelion contains nothing really new so at least the title is accurate but doubtless, many otaku will lap it all up. While it is nice to see the series that really sucked me into anime fandom still having such great appeal, all this smacks of exploitation of the original work and of suckers consumers.

Speaking of which, I actually bought this cute set of figurines of Asuka and Rei in streetwear versions of their plugsuits. Complete with accessories! It was second-hand and much cheaper at JPY 2,600 (SGD 40) compared to the usual price of JPY 4,280 (SGD 66). And I’m actually rather disturbed that I still can’t bring myself to take them out of the packaging. (-_-;) Zyl

You Have Two Cows (Corporate Edition)

Supporting material for the next post about GAINAX and its continued milking of Evangelion. Got this from an email circulated around a few years ago which, of course, I got it from my dad a few weeks ago. It’s amazing how old jokes get resurrected when our parents actually start to enjoy using email. Anyhowz the geneology of cow jokes is discussed in Wikipedia as well as a collection of jokes .

TRADITIONAL CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You sell one and buy a bull.
Your herd multiplies and the economy grows.
You sell them and retire on the income.

AN AMERICAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You sell one and force the other to produce the milk of four cows.
You are surprised when the cow drops dead.

A FRENCH CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You go on strike because you want three cows.

A JAPANESE CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You redesign them so they are one-tenth the size of an ordinary cow and produce twenty times the milk.
You then create clever cow cartoon images called “Cowkimon” and market them world-wide.

A GERMAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You re-engineer them so they live for 100 years, eat once a month,
and milk themselves.

A BRITISH CORPORATION

You have two cows.
Both are mad.

AN ITALIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows, but you don’t know where they are.
You break for lunch.

A SWISS CORPORATION

You have 5,000 cows and none of which belong to you.
You charge others for storing them.

A CHINESE CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You have 300 people milking them.
You claim full employment and high bovine productivity.
You have the newsman who reported on the numbers arrested.

AN INDIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You worship them.

A SINGAPOREAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
One cow-peh and one cow-bu.




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