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How Censorship Begins Without Censorship

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Lafiel

と呼ぶがよい
Censorship thrives on fear. Sometimes the mere threat of censorship arising can cause businesses to change policies and authors to avoid certain subjects.

This is particularly true in cases where the legal boundaries are left extremely vague and enforced unevenly. If authorities retain the power to curtail certain activities which are popular but legally dubious, then accommodating the authorities gain priority over complying with laws that are vague. Accommodating the authorities does not necessarily entail overt corruption or embezzlement, but instead can mean changing one’s behavior to match the mood of the authorities.

It is very common for the Japanese police to leave certain activities undisturbed for decades, only to raid the operation once it becomes “embarrassing” or “inconvenient.” An extremely telling example of this took place January of this year. (This incident has been written about in English here and here but these are not safe for work sites. Just to prove that this case did take place, here is the link to the new story as written by Sankei, which is one Japan’s largest news outlets.)

Conversely, by curtailing certain activities and imposing self-censorship, the businesses hope to be able to present themselves as being “sensitive” and “respecting the authority of the police.”

I will not go into the moral issues inartistic to such backstage deal making and face saving gestures, although I personally believe that this is very dangerous and counterproductive. Engaging in such “accommodation” tends to encourage authorities to seek as much power as possible, then “benevolently” limit their enforcement so then not to appear as oppressive authoritarians to the electorate, yet retain the power to prosecute a large swath of the population any time they wish, cementing their control of the populace. Thus, legality is dictated by the police’s decisions, not what is defined by law.

One consequence of this type of relationship is the tendency to over-self censor.

In April 2011, after the passage of Bill 156 by the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly, there was talk within the Japanese publishing industry for an industry wide self-imposed ban on all sexual depictions of characters that would appear to be under age of 13, regardless of the nature, purpose, or explicitness of the depiction. The story was broken by Takashi Hiruma, and many others followed up on it. Here is the fax that was circulated. Fortunately, it appears many publishers were dissatisfied at such talk and the leak was the result of such discontent. Manga author Takeshi Nogami talked about this, revealing that this was part of an ongoing debate that was taking place within the Japanese publishing industry.

In March 2012, one person wrote emails to Amazon Japan, complaining that they were selling certain manga as she claimed as child pornography. She made her efforts public, and because Amazon Japan complied, the incident became an important news item. The details regarding this incident are worthy of an entire different blog entry, but it is important to note that in both cases, the question of what constitutes child pornography were completely left out. The simple accusation of engaging in child pornography, even if no real children were involved in its production, is enough to compel firms to self-censor. Part of this is the simple desire of firms to avoid being embarrassed, but another part is how advocates of censorship have been successful in combining talk of real child sex abuse with fictional depictions.

Going back to topic of police authority, if the new child pornography law does go into effect, the police will have wide discretion in determining what is and what is not child pornography. The desire to control fictional depictions of sexual situations involving minors is nothing new. When Japan first enacted a child pornography law in 1999, the original draft created by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party made it clear that all depictions of sexual situations involving minors would be made illegal, even in cases where minors did not exist. The original draft covered all photographs, artwork, video tapes, and more. It was only after aggressive lobbying by concerned parties that the part about “artwork” was struck out.

Now the proponents of censorship are claiming that “international pressures” are pushing Japan to accept a wider definition of what constitutes child pornography. It is very convenient to pick and chose voices from overseas that amplify calls for more censorship while ignoring the foreign voices that call for restraint and seek to preserve artistic freedom while maintaining safety for real children.

But since the proponents of censorship have powerful advocates within the ruling party, and many top police officials have repeatedly made it clear that they seek the power to regulate depictions of sexuality in fiction, the issue not only remains active, but strikes fear within the minds of many businesses.

The power of the police to arbitrarily determine illegality is most directly felt in conjunction with Article 175 of the Japanese Penal Code, the anti-obscenity law. It is illegal to distribute obscene material in Japan, but the police continue to only selectively enforce this law while the courts have passed down guidelines that are very vague. (For those that would like additional information, I highly recommend this article by Joaquin da Silva. I would like to note that as of now, verdicts are issued by judges and not juries regarding violations of Article 175.)

This power to define legality ferments an environment where there is a strong motivation for firms to change business practices in such a way so that they can plead their case to the police as being cooperative and therefore do not warrant being prosecuted. This creates strange circumstances where some firms may decide to self-censor in ways that seem to make no sense whatsoever.

In June of 2012, DMM.R18, the adult arm of one of Japan’s largest online media distribution services, DMM.com, wrote to their content providers that they will classify certain sexually explicit fictional titles as being “child pornography” and no longer feature them on the top page, but will continue selling them. While completely ignoring the fact that Japanese law stipulates real children must be involved for something to be treated as child pornography, DMM.R18 policy writers seem to suffer a mental block as well since the law explicit states that selling child pornography is illegal. DMM.R18 further stipulated that certain key words would be censored, (i.e. grade schooler will be displayed as “XXXXX XXXXXXXX.”) To top it off, they stated that if anyone should disclose this information publicly, the restriction standards may have to be straightened.

Many content providers were offended by such brazen attempt to muzzle critics of their new flawed policy and the information was leaked immediately. DMM.R18 was forced to reword “child pornography” to “works that involve images and text that the audience would associate with minors.”

And all this happened before the LDP returned to power in December of 2012 and talk of revising the child pornography law was revived earlier this year.

Once the news that the revision was being considered, the chilling effect took hold immediately.

In late April of 2013, Taiki Nishimura, a director that has worked on multiple mainstream anime series as well as adult themed anime and video games, revealed that a distributor of adult anime requested animation production companies to refrain from making erotic anime featuring characters that appear to be minors. The distributor’s request caused some anime projects to be cancelled and certain animation production firms were stated to have gotten out of the business because of this. Nishimura further states that the distributor’s logic was that companies should refrain from producing material that could be construed child pornography as a new law was being considered, plus this would meet the needs of overseas buyers of Japanese anime. The director relays rumors that adult anime featuring housewives were going become more prevalent in the future.

Then news broke on May 24th of 2013 that Yahoo Auction (a.k.a. Yafuoku,) Japan’s largest auction site, was going to prohibit sales of all material that could be construed as depictions of minor in sexually provocative poses, regardless of whether or not the minor really exists. The detailed guidelines can be read here.

Ken Akamatsu revealed that Yahoo was willing to approach him to talk about why they made their decision. He states that he hopes to publicly disclose any information that he comes by through this meeting.

What’s even more, adult manga magazine have started to increase the size and the frequency with which the small black boxes are applied to the gentile areas. The standards of self-censorship to comply with Article 175 has been relatively stable for nearly a decade, giving further credence that fear and loathing against the revision of the child pornography law is real and rampant.

The only bright note that I can think of is there is a possibility that there may not be enough time for the Diet to vote on the measure, or even if the lower house does passes it, the upper house might be dissolved in conjunction with the national elections scheduled in July. However, polls seem to indicate that the LDP may win the upper house in a landslide.

Good night and good luck.

https://dankanemitsu.wordpress.com/...ect-how-censorship-begins-without-censorship/

Looks like the end of lolis in anime and manga is upon us my friends.;_;
 
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What’s even more, adult manga magazine have started to increase the size and the frequency with which the small black boxes are applied to the gentile areas. The standards of self-censorship to comply with Article 175 has been relatively stable for nearly a decade, giving further credence that fear and loathing against the revision of the child pornography law is real and rampant.

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Um, lolis are shit. Nothing bad comes from losing those.
It's a slippery slope, once they take away lolis, who knows what they'll take away from us next.
How do you feel about gratuitous panty shots?
That's usually not done in shows that would be described as moe though. In fact "moe" could be described as a reaction against that kind of sexualization in anime.
 
i'll never forgive the loli, moe or whatever the fuck scene for poisoning star ocean 4. YOU CAN ALL BURN IN HELL.

deep breaths, serenity now.
 
First they came for the communists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist.

Then they came for the socialists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Jew.

Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Catholic.

Then they came for me,
and there was no one left to speak for me.
 
I love slippery slope arguments. You know what a slippery slope is? Laws. Police. Governments. Regulations. So when you take a single action like this and say "slippery slope!" it makes me laugh because whatever country we're discussing's already slid halfway down that mother fucking slope. Further, the absence of laws or regulations is also a slippery slope! Oh God what to do?

The answer is simple, just take each measure one by one and decide what to do and what not to do.
 
I love slippery slope arguments. You know what a slippery slope is? Laws. Police. Governments. Regulations. So when you take a single action like this and say "slippery slope!" it makes me laugh because whatever country we're discussing's already slid halfway down that mother fucking slope. Further, the absence of laws or regulations is also a slippery slope! Oh God what to do?

The answer is simple, just take each measure one by one and decide what to do and what not to do.

This is a good post.
 
First they came for the communists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist.

Then they came for the socialists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Jew.

Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Catholic.

Then they came for cartoons of kids getting raped by tentacles,
and there was no one left to speak for me.

Truly, this is 1984.
 
I love slippery slope arguments. You know what a slippery slope is? Laws. Police. Governments. Regulations. So when you take a single action like this and say "slippery slope!" it makes me laugh because whatever country we're discussing's already slid halfway down that mother fucking slope. Further, the absence of laws or regulations is also a slippery slope! Oh God what to do?

The answer is simple, just take each measure one by one and decide what to do and what not to do.

Except that they're not "deciding what to do and not to do." The whole thing is left purposefully vague in an effort to promote self-censoring fear, more power for the police, and the political agenda of a conservative party.

I am not into loli-anime porn, but I think it's a bit too convenient to say that there isn't reason for concern simply because you don't care about the material in question.

That's fine, I guess. There are plenty of relevant examples of this happening in American society, as well.
 
What’s even more, adult manga magazine have started to increase the size and the frequency with which the small black boxes are applied to the gentile areas. The standards of self-censorship to comply with Article 175 has been relatively stable for nearly a decade, giving further credence that fear and loathing against the revision of the child pornography law is real and rampant.

Jewish porno only? :O
 
I'm not into dirty manga, but it always had "existence value" to me. Like if I woke up one day and Niagara falls disappeared, even though I never visited it, I'd feel sad that it was gone.
 
The message being sent is diluted by the creepy child pornography vibe. "Fictional depictions of child abuse" sounds really sketchy.

It would carry more weight if it was divorced from fictional child pornography. Perhaps apply it to wholesome, normal pornography enjoyed by the common man.
 
The message being sent is diluted by the creepy child pornography vibe. "Fictional depictions of child abuse" sounds really sketchy.

It would carry more weight if it was divorced from fictional child pornography. Perhaps apply it to wholesome, normal pornography enjoyed by the common man.

At least you see it.
 
I don't know if this is at all likely, but it would be unfortunate if banning this stuff increased child sex abuse rates due to people having no alternative outlet for their kiddie fixations.

In any case, I'm unequivocally against art censorship.
 
I don't know if this is at all likely, but it would be unfortunate if banning this stuff increased child sex abuse rates due to people having no alternative outlet for their kiddie fixations.

In any case, I'm unequivocally against art censorship.

When it comes to pedos it could go either way because they haven't actually done too much studying about whether such porn lowers urges or makes them more inclined to act out said fantasies irl.
 
At least you see it.

I'm against censorship, but pairing it up with "fictional child abuse" only hurts their case.

The tone given off by the way the author describes loli porn is pretty creepy: I can't see many people rallying to support this cause.
 
Japan already censors porn and it really didn't stop the deluge of rape and pedophilia in porn. You can't fight these things like that anyway, you have to tear down the prevailing attitude that glorifies this stuff. Censorship in itself helps nothing.
 
Pretty shitty so I hope nothing gets passed to cripple things again. It's hard to get some information about some doujinsoft games with a US IP now because of the Rapelay fiasco.
 
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