this post was submitted on 29 May 2024
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I get that Lemmy's (and Reddit's) favorite Bogeyman is capitalism, but the system of economics generally has absolutely nothing to do with region locking content.
Generally, content is region locked for reasons such as:
trademark is already taken in the destination country and the IP holder doesn't want to register a new name
traditional Japanese companies literally do not care about any market outside of Japan even if that market offers more potential profit
the author doesn't want to sell to the destination country
the destination country has content restrictions or censorship preventing sale of the work
the IP is licensed to a thirdy party but the third party refuses to make the content available in the destination country for whatever reason
My argument is that companies are offering money for the exclusive license to a work for a given region (i.e. licenses are sold on a geographic basis, or linguistic, in some cases), and thus the result is that there doesn't exist a single distributor globally.
There cannot be one single global distributor. They would need too much specific knowledge of trademark and copyright laws for every destination country, among others, in order to do that. Plus that would be a distribution monopoly, which in many Western countries is illegal.
I don't see how trademark and copyright law would be a hindrance. Any multinational company and any company with global markets has to gain this expertise, and they contract lawyers to do so.
Steam can do it. Bandcamp can do it. Netflix can do it. Amazon can do it. What is supposed to be so different for manga or anime?