Thursday, September 6, 2007

Odex offers olive branch to anime downloaders

No action will be taken for downloads made before Monday, says anime distributor

A COMPANY that has attracted online venom for its campaign against pirated Japanese animated movies, or anime, has extended an olive branch to alleged offenders.

Anime distributor Odex's director Stephen Sing has written on the firm's web forums it will not take action against those who stop Internet anime downloading 'now'.

Mr Sing was referring to Monday this week, when he wrote the message.

He added that if an Internet user complies then 'he will have no possibility of ever receiving any letters from the copyright holders as we will not take anything that he has downloaded before this date against him'.

Contacted by The Straits Times, Mr Sing confirmed that he wrote the message, but declined to elaborate pending an official statement.

Since May, Odex, the region's biggest distributor of the animated Japanese cartoons, has sent out letters to several hundred alleged downloaders demanding settlement sums of $3,000 to $5,000, on threat of legal action.

The Straits Times understands that Odex has already sent letters to alleged anime downloaders using the Internet service provider SingNet. It earlier obtained contact details of these users.

It has obtained a court order to get the names of alleged downloaders from StarHub, but has yet to receive any names.

On Monday, Odex filed an application to appeal a court decision blocking its attempt to obtain the details of Pacific Internet downloaders.

This means that StarHub and PacNet downloaders, even if Odex's appeal succeeded, would be safe from any penalty.

Mr Sing did not say what prompted Odex's change of heart.

Still, the firm has been criticised online over issues such as alleged profiteering. Others fear a successful crackdown on pirated anime would lead to similar crackdowns on other media.

According to an Intellectual Property Office of Singapore study on Singaporeans' attitudes towards intellectual property here, only one in five Singaporeans is 'bothered' by piracy.

Mr Sing wrote that the firm will now 'focus enforcement efforts on those who have continued to download illegally even after the publicity in the press on this issue'.

He did not say what would happen to those who already settled with Odex, but noted that these were 'heavy or persistent downloaders'.

'We will continue to negotiate with those who have not settled the matter yet, or take action if we are instructed to do so by the copyright owners.'

Undergraduate Eugene Tang, a StarHub subscriber who used to download anime before news of the crackdown broke, finds Odex's olive branch acceptable.

Given the widespread coverage of this issue, he said, 'you would have to be living under a rock to still be able to say that you don't know unauthorised downloads are illegal, so I guess it is fair for Odex to prosecute those who continue to download'.

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