So, coming after the war, but I had a couple thoughts of my own…
1.) The Basics of Licensing
Not gonna get into too much detail here, but your whole presentation tends to be rather US-oriented. There are broadly two approaches to intellectual property rights : copyright, mainly used in common law countries, and authors’ rights, used pretty much everywhere else. These two approaches tend to blend together, mainly due to international treatises like the Bern Convention, but they remain fundamentally opposed : authors’ rights protect the
creators (hence the notions of moral rights and neighboring rights which are mostly absent in common law countries), while copyright protects the
revenues.
And I feel it’s important when discussing matters of intellectual property to keep in mind which approach is used in the legal system of the country from which the protected work stems. Case in point, Japan is an authors’ rights country, which means that reasoning in terms of US-style copyright is risky at best.
But here's the caveat: It is completely up to the publisher that holds that copyright to pursue cases of infringement. And while only the protections under the applicable treaties applies, legal action in and of itself can only be applied under the laws of the country in which the person committing the infringement resides.
For instance, this can be extremely misleading. I do not know how Japanese law works on this specific matter, but to give an example I am more familiar with (and to oversimplify), under French law, copyright infringement is a
felony, which means our equivalent of the DA can take legal action without the need for the authors’ rights’ holder to lift a finger.
And French penal law is extraterritorial as long as the victim is French or France-based and the act was committed on the Internet, meaning you
can get prosecuted as long as the rights of some French actor are somehow involved: stupid example, but if you use a copy of the French official version of a manga to do your Russian scanlation, you can be prosecuted for infringing on the rights of the French translator.
On the other hand, it is important to remember that your country’s laws apply even when you’re using material from a more permissive country. For instance, English-language Wikipedia can show strongly size-reduced versions of the cover of books, because it falls under Fair Use, whereas the French-language Wikipedia has no such thing, because there is no Fair Use in French law, and so it would be copyright infringement (yes, I know, it’s stupid).
This is why copyright strikes against Mangadex are done under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) of the USA - MD is mostly operated by residents of the USA, so legal action typically takes place under the USA's judicial system.
Once again, the matter is not that simple. DMCA only applies to
platforms and service providers operating in the USA, regardless of where the people operating them reside. Mangadex Inc is a US legal entity targeting (among others) US residents, so they have to comply to DMCA. But, and even if they are not necessarily aware of it, since they
also target EU residents, they should be complying to article 17 of the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market which mandates
proactive measures against copyright infringement.
Also, there are “paralegal” ways to crack down on copyright infringement, especially within US law (they looove their extraterritoriality, damn wankers…): if the platform itself is out of reach of the DMCA, then maybe the legal entity providing the
storage or the domain name for the platform isn’t. Or last resort, the financial platform by which the money to fund the platform transits is probably American (you talked about this a bit in the section about self-hosting).
TL;DR: International law is muddy, especially regarding what happens on the Internet, so it’s better to assume you are
not safe.
3.1.) I feel that no one should be accepting payment or donations - none whatsoever - for fansubbing or scanslation.
I have a more “real politic” approach here:
scanlation is piracy. Be it for profit or completely disinterested, it’s still piracy. You are doing something illegal, and from a practical standpoint, the only thing that matters is: how much are you ready to lose to do this illegal thing?
My personal view on the matter is that pirates should lay low, aim to be as anonymous and invisible as possible, and consequently, not seek any monetary gratification nor fame, recognition, or whatsoever. Credit pages and watermarks are, for me, the epitome of stupidity. At least until you encounter groups trepanned enough to paywall chapters on their own website…
But then again, each person has their own profit/cost balance, and if you are ready to face several years in prison (or whatever the sentence is in your country) in order to make a few dozen dollars on the translation of some generic big tiddy isekai harem slop, then you do you…
3.2.) Furthermore, I will also state my opinion on the idea of running a website outside of Mangadex. It is idiotic and foolhardy. And I will state why.
Running your very own pirate flagship is indeed utterly stupid. On the other hand, Mangadex cannot be trusted and should not be trusted for long term conservation of the scanlations, so dispersing your work on a variety of hosting platforms, some of them low visibility and with little entry requirements, seems like a pretty good idea. It can be something really simple like an anonymous upload on Imgur, some random static GitHub site, etc.
3.4.) Furthermore, and to be quite frank, the entire business model is trash. On both ends.
I happen to be a published author IRL. Not fiction, some “smart” book, and I’m one of several co-authors, so it’s not perfectly equivalent, but to give you an idea, as of yet, my book has sold around 1100 copies, which is quite decent for the French market. I have earned a total of roughly 85 € on all these sales. The publishing world is indeed complete trash. Which is why I have zero moral qualm about translating mass produced entertainment to languages for which the original creators have no interest whatsoever. Just give adequate attribution, and sail on, yoho!