Interest
Pirated Manga Artist Gujira Not Quitting After All
posted on by Eric Stimson
Last weekend, we reported on the dōjinshi artists about his impending departure.

Gujira clarified on January 20 that he wasn't serious about quitting and that he had written the tweet "while carried away by petty grumbling." He went on to write on January 24 that he had changed his mind since there was no way to protect himself from illegal ing and ing. "Instead, I should include viruses in an indefinite number of my works," he tweeted. "That should reduce the illegal s."
Gujira might not have to resort to hiding viruses in his work files. The English-language erotic manga website and publisher Gal toka Bitch toka Iroiro. ("A Gal, a Bitch, and Whatnot."). FAKKU credited media coverage of Gujira's problems with piracy for motivating them to him about publishing it and Gujira agreed, making Gal FAKKU's first new acquisition of 2016 (link NSFW).
Piracy is an ongoing problem in Japan and seems intractable due to the difficulty of punishing the perpetrators, especially if they are foreigners. FAKKU claims that the actual figure of illegal s of Gujira's work is more like 500,000. Yet there have been noteworthy recent legal attacks on pirates: were arrested in Kyoto Prefecture last year.
[Via Yaraon! and Naver Matome; Image from Plurk]
this article has been modified since it was originally posted; see change history