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I like free and easy access to everything as much as the next guy, but there is no way I could ever construe this as bad business on the part of the publishers. Yes, they have a lot on their plate to deal with, changing demographics, novelty factor wearing off a bit, increasing visibility, needing stronger tv show tie-ins to draw interest, the on-line availability genie being out of the bottle for most of their market. Despite all that though, sidelining what is potentially your most damaging competition probably trumps all of that, especially when that competition isn't entirely legal. If that clears the way for their own subscription service, which seems likely, great, or if it simply clears the way for their own on-line chapter freebie teasers to get people to buy books, also great. The industry certainly needs some changes to remain viable, and chief among them is exerting some control over the distribution of the material they paid for and base their existence on.
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Yeah sorry, I didn't mean to sound like the US publishers were filthy assholes or anything; they're completely within their rights to do what they've done. I'm just questioning ultimately what the long-term results of this would be. If they had cracked down like this when these big sites first started popping up, it would have been a different story. But big, easily accessible sites have been around for so long now that a lot of people are basically spoiled and won't buy anything.
Also ignoring the vast majority of people that won't buy stuff no matter what, I'd personally attribute the decline in sales mostly to either:
-Delay in release schedule; at this point even most people I know (including myself) that actually buy stuff still read scanlations because you're usually looking at months or longer for those same chapters to be release stateside.
-Honestly, the market has been completely flooded with a ton of crap. Right when manga started to first get really big in the US around 2002 or so TokyoPop, Viz, and other companies were just shitting out practically everything. I know myself and lot of people got burned eventually because there was just so much crap out there, there was no quality control (especially Tokyopop) and I just stopped buying stuff because at a point I'm looking at a shelf and almost everything I saw was either something I'd never heard of, or something I knew was bad.
I think the release schedule hurts it way more than anything, but that's unavoidable to some extent just because of weekly releases in Japan vs. volumes in the US, but even today I still can look at a manga section in Barnes and Noble and not have any clue what half of the shit there is. Honestly the only way I could say that there would be zero excuse to grab scanlations is if the publishers did a subscription website of some sort where they had turnaround times same week like scanlators do. Like Acer said though, there's huge hurdles to that, and the few series I read are spread out across three different publishers IIRC, so it's just not practical for most people even if that happened.
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