🎁GameSir G7 Pro ZZZ Edition Giveaway 🎁
Happy 2nd Anniversary, Proxies! To celebrate this milestone, we’re giving away the GameSir G7 Pro ZZZ Edition controllers to help you conquer the Hollows!
May we continue this journey together for many years to come! 🎮✨
Prizes (3 Winners):
3× G7 Pro ZZZ Edition
How to enter:
❤️Like this post.
📀Follow @mygamesir
📡Repost
Ends July 10th
I have participated on the 37th and last episode of Dr.STONE: Science Future! I have worked as an Animation Supervisor (作監). 🧪
I've helped with the scenes both before and after the opening sequence!
- Thank you for watching! -
#DrSTONE
To celebrate Season 3 day, I've teamed up with @mygamesir to give away another G7 Pro Zenless Zone Zero Edition Controller!
How to enter:
- Like & Retweet this post
- Follow @Zenlessnewz & @mygamesir
Winners announced in 7 days. Good luck, everyone!
❤️GameSir G7 Pro ZZZ Edition Giveaway❤️
Take flight, proxies! ✈️ The skies of Roscaelifer await!
To make sure your setup is ready for the climb, we’re giving away some of our top-tier gear to help you perform at your best!
Prizes (3 Winners):
3× G7 Pro ZZZ Edition
How to enter:
❤️Like this post.
☎️Follow @mygamesir
📡Repost
Ends June 22th
“On Readers Who Read Manga for Free”
This time, I would like to talk about something a little sensitive—no, in fact, something extremely sensitive.
That is the issue of readers around the world who consume pirated manga(manga piracy).
There are many ways we can think about the problem of “reading manga through piracy overseas.”
1. So is reading manga piracy illegal?
Surprisingly, in many cases, it is not(!).
But is that really so surprising?
Let’s think about what “illegal” actually means for a moment.
For something to be considered illegal, it must violate the laws of the country where the person resides.
(Although the reality is more complex, let’s simplify it for now.)
For reading pirated foreign manga to be illegal, that country must be a member of an international copyright system based on the TRIPS Agreement.
After joining such an international copyright system, the country must also revise its domestic copyright laws to align with global standards.
Only then does reading pirated foreign works—such as manga and webtoons from Japan and Korea—become illegal in that country.
If a country has not done so, then for its citizens, reading pirated versions of foreign manga is not “illegal.”
In other words, it is not a criminal act.
South Korea joined the international copyright system in 1988.
Before that, copying and distributing Japanese manga without authorization was legally permissible.
China joined in 2004.
Japan, meanwhile, joined as early as 1899.
Yes—1899.
Even today, there are many countries in the world that are not part of the international copyright system.
For citizens of those countries, reading pirated Japanese manga is not a crime.
Let me repeat this clearly: it is not illegal.
And from the perspective of a creator, this is a very painful truth.
However, there is no universal obligation for every country in the world to join the international copyright system.
That is a matter of national sovereignty and choice.
But still, we may have a better solution.
At least, I have been thinking about a possible approach to this issue.
For now, I will continue developing this idea a little further.
To be contined.