- We will not be providing books for any of her precure doujins. We will on originals though. The reason for this is because Japanese copyright and American copyright are two different things. Japanese copyright chooses to ignore doujins, US copyright may not. I've talked to the 2 biggest English hentai book companies and both have told me that they cannot print parody doujins. I'm aware doujinpress does, but what they do isn't really legal, they put up a legal page that essentially says "don't sue us, we're not printing very many, it's not worth your time." this doesn't work for bigger companies. As they aren't going to limit their sales to appease such a thing.
A question related to this. Precure doujins won't get translated? or even digitally published? I'm just confused because most of her work that I like are Precure related and if nobody is going to translate them anymore, I don't think I have the wallet to regularly buy those doujins directly from Japan D: Kinda wish that Isya would make her work available digitally
Like Yuri-ism says, Japanese copyright holders usually choose to ignore Doujin because they probably know that these works will encourage consumers to get into the show or its derivatives, which leads them to buy official goods/merchandise/books/etc. (animation primarily makes money off of BluRay/DVD sales, merchandise, toys, etc. and not the show itself, which is why character designers will often make bad guys look cooler than the good guys - to promote merch sales) And I think that's also why Doujin usually have small print runs - to avoid attracting too much 'official' attention and possible litigation.
A lot of Doujin are available digitally, but it's tough to buy them off the Japanese sites. Some require a JP address or credit card, and almost all are DRM'ed or locked. It depends on the author if they want to offer it online, though.
I'm not sure if doujin licensing works like it does for garage kit makers, but I'm going to assume it's somewhat similar? For garage kit makers, I know that licenses are handed out to the kit makers on a 'one day' or 'per event' agreement, which is why most garage kit sales happen during events like WonFes. They are legally allowed to sell the kits for that day only. And it's the event organizers who talk to the companies about which series can be sold and which can't. Comiket and other events probably handles that for the Doujin side?
last edited at Jan 2, 2015 1:52PM