Japan Launches Major International Body To Fight Anime Piracy
Hollywood studios are joining the group, which also targets manga piracy.
Hollywood studios are joining the group, which also targets manga piracy.
Blue Sky is alleged to have taken $83 million more than it should have from Connecticut residents between 2017 and 2021.
As have many other books, films, compositions, and a trove of around 400,000 sound recordings.
“We hope that this settlement properly acknowledges those who had negative experiences at Riot,” the company said in a statement.
“The very limited portion allocated to animation . . . constitutes a real disappointment and lack of understanding from the platforms,” says one organization.
Jean Chalopin’s career arc could almost be pinched from an “Inspector Gadget” storyline.
Anderson is accused of duping investors into contributing to his companies. If convicted, he could face decades in jail.
The video involved “a wholesale copying” of Eddy Grant’s song “Electric Avenue,” a judge has ruled.
This isn’t the suit the state of California filed in July. There’s another one.
The Avengers are caught up in their biggest battle yet.
Cocomelon’s maker is suing Super Jojo for “copying and exploiting every possible element of the Cocomelon channel.”
At this restaurant in Houston, diners can order a Bikini Bottom Blast cocktail and take photos with Spongebob himself – just don’t tell ViacomCBS.
The union’s main goal is to ensure that ex-employees receive their severance payments.
Damon Pourshian, who claims Pixar ripped off his student film “Inside Out,” has won an appeal in an Ontario court.
Harmony Gold USA and Japan’s Big West, two companies at the center of the long-running dispute over the “Macross” franchise, have struck a groundbreaking deal that few fans saw coming.
Disney lawyers found a loophole in Jeffrey Scott’s case: the writer’s personal 2003 bankruptcy.
The Disney-owned studio claimed the wrong kind of credit for three years, according to state auditors, receiving a total of nearly $100 million in tax credits.
A highly improbable crime caper concerning classic Soviet animation.
The 81-year-old author will now work to develop his library into a “Beagleverse” of new projects.
The federal government estimates that, if the law passes, online companies could end up investing USD$627 million in local content by 2023.