‘Operation Animes’ Shuts Down 16 Illegal Streaming Sites - Japan and Brazil have teamed up to fight piracy by shutting down anime streaming sites.

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If you woke up this morning hoping to catch up on One Piece or maybe some Jujutsu Kaisen episodes on your favorite illegal streaming site, you probably had a rude awakening. You probably discovered that the site doesn’t exist anymore.

That’s because Japan and Brazil teamed up to obliterate 16 of the biggest illegal streaming sites on the Internet because they dared to stream anime.

Japan has been steadfast in its fight against anime piracy. And it makes sense why. It’s one of their biggest cultural exports and rakes in billions of dollars a year, and they’d probably be making a lot more if these sites didn’t exist. So, they collaborated with Brazilian authorities on a special operation called “Operation Animes.”

The first phase of the operation, in February and March 2023, resulted in the closure of 36 anime pirating sites. The second phase has been underway since September 2023 and has been responsible for the closure of 16 another sites, including Aniwave aka 9anime. Three of the site takedowns were reportedly following criminal charges by Toei Animation, Toho, and Bandai Namco Filmworks.

The whole operation has been spearheaded by an organization called CODA, or the Content Overseas Distribution Association. Based in Japan, the organization enacts countermeasures against global piracy of Japanese media, mostly anime and manga. All of this coincides with a Brazilian antipiracy initiative launched in 2019 called “Operation 404” which aims to cease the operations of piracy sites, apps, and social media accounts.

Brazilian authorities conducted “knock and talk” raids of the site owners’ premises. Eleven of the sites were voluntarily surrendered by their operators. The sites now redirect to a CODA page announcing their closure.

One has to wonder how effective these operations are going to be, considering that piracy sites are a dime a dozen. It’s essentially a giant game of Internet whack-a-mole. You can take down 16 of them—but will another 50 quickly take their place?

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The journo is cooming at the thought of hurting the lives of normie kids. Ropemaxx, faggot.


Meh, casuals. True weebs know how badly Japanese mangles English loan words. Once you've seen that, you've seen everything. Even BBC pidgin can't compare.

And on the other side, Westerners badly mangle Japanese words. For example, in the West "hentai" refers to anything relating to drawn porn in the anime style. But in Japan, hentai (or ecchi) just means a person who is perverted or coombrained.
 
In the dark, dark past when I was first getting into anime... I committed a grave sin. Paying for Crunchyroll, falling to the tempation of watching on my phone without getting an arsehole put in front of my video by an ad.

Then I saw the light, and hoisted the black flag. I will never pay a penny for any anime again when one site dies, 30 more will take it's place.

By the way hianime is still up and seems like a good enough site (use a VPN!) after Aniwave was sunk by the crown.
 
I watched Did You Know Gaming's recent video on Pokémon fangames vs Nintendo's lawyers and it was mentioned the recent takedowns in that community were by complete random chance because the Japanese are using AI to track them now. I'm going to assume that's what's also happening here, 'cause it's honestly interesting that Gogoanime has been left alone when that's a pretty old site. It might be one of the older ones left standing with little change far as I can tell.

By the way hianime is still up and seems like a good enough site (use a VPN!) after Aniwave was sunk by the crown.
It's not bad, just am not a fan of their closed captions. I found AnimeOwl has a better video player even though the site very clearly ripped files from 9anime lol. But hey, I wanted the fansubs.
 
Wow, could've fooled me, I literally streamed part 2 of Season 2 of Mushoko Tensi on anime.to, lmaooo.
 
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