@DeerA I see, I just haven't checked ublock's stats on WordPress blogs in so long so I didn't realize it had gotten so bad. I read your translations at manganelo (it's whatever the mal-sync Firefox extension offered as a backup aggregator) and found them very entertaining (and Mira's verbal quirks and ye Olde English were especially endearing), thank you very much.
As an aside, not really directed at you but more to a new meme that I never observed among my peers either in childhood or now (ie the cohort I grew up with), is that it is probably a mistake to assert that someone who steals information is someone who has lost the moral high ground. Don't forget every piece of tech you own is backdoor'd, and the first services to receive things like quantum entanglement-based security ("cryptography") are always those with a vested interest in stealing your information. For example, there is nothing stopping people from using democratized DNS servers (really DNS namespaces), except for these entities (both public and private) engaging in conspiracy to, for example, demand root access across practically all their commodities to do something as simple as changing a single configuration file in a phone's operating system. To illustrate the point, there is nothing stopping my grandaunt from using a formally-verified and democratized end-to-end comms system, except for the fact that her phone ("a "Google go" phone) is shipped virtually without a harddrive (can't install apps at all) and supports only Facebook and Whatsapp for alternative comms systems. It is a curious thing to see the more artistic and verbally fluent in society like yourself (but also plenty of other people) to be uncaring about privacy, what with privacy-violating intrusions themselves being baked into default technique ("sell your Manga to buy food because you can't grow it yourself" implying "feed your children supermarket bone broth and don't complain when it fails to yield the same effects as the bone broth your grandparents made") -- not that I mean you explicitly disregard privacy, only that your words have the logical implication that what is currently optional (e2e encryption) will one day be impossible (as is already the case with welfare-based Google go phones - I can buy her a better phone but most aren't in that situation). What I'm saying might not seem to logically tie together because it must sound like I'm justifying stealing, but the point is the emergent technique (c.f. Jacques Ellul's The Technological Society) trends toward fundamentally precluding autonomy as the general population trends toward claiming what was once optional (selling information to live) as fundamentally necessary. Proof of this point requires lived engineering experience I think, but a quick non-technical counterexample to the notion of information as a commodity being OK is, I think, for example: hitherto, you never stole water... right? That doesn't make sense! ... but if you, as is the case in several municipalities with ubiquitous wells, find that you can neither power yourself nor water yourself because household utilities have been shut down because you can't pay yearly expenses of a measly $500-1000 in the USA... but your neighbor has solar panels and a deep and wide water well established 100 years ago (cheap to build back then) and is upgrading his batteries to lithium titanate batteries with 20-100 year lifespans (cheap tomprocure today) and solar cells with lifespans measuring in the millions of years already in the late stages of r&d... and you find direct technical aid is legally all but precluded but welfare aid is encouraged... then certainly
something has gone horribly wrong, and here I mean to suggest that something is, like you could read in Ellul's book I mentioned above, not a slippery slope fallacy but indeed a positive feedback loop whose positive feedback is, to put it mildly, roasting individuals for stealing information -- for over time all information necessary to live comes under lock and key, and something as seemingly unassuming as entertainment under lock and key is but an accessory to that social violence, the consequences of which are now ubiquitous and becoming only worse with every passing year (although, this "becoming worse" requires specialist knowledge to logically conclude exists... riscv blabla librerisc blabla arm scalable vector extensions blabla no one would ever care enough to be immune to nom-sequitur counterarguments).
I won't type any more because I am long-winded, but I just thought I'd mention some stuff I've observed that might not be in other people's common sense, perhaps because your muses draw most folk's attentions whereas I, for example, see cheap battery and I wonder why it isn't already all over the place... it's not like the news reports on these things so how else would anyone know? I don't mean to be insulting, I only mean to provide information you and others might not be aware of, not that anyone has to pay attention or anything....
With regard to avoiding legal trouble I must concur that there are quite a number of ways of publishing your work (or hobby) that mathematically guarantee no human short of one with godlike tendrils everywhere could ever identify an email or mailing address to send a cease-and-desist order to you... of the ones that are in use and are not nearly so robust, the only one that is user-friendly is managed by insane asylum people obsessed with ponies... Well, a nice middle ground is something like Matrix, which is like IRC and in fact interacts with IRC, has support on Weechat and Emacs, and supports voip and group video calls... not perfect, but good enough... stop using discord, everyone... no one cares, of course....
EDIT Ah, I just remembered I once asked this site's admins about why some standard database interface for accessing our favorites list and reading progress info wasn't made available. The response was random mockery: "You are an idiot." This struck me as odd seeing as how stuff like accessing GIS data over web XML requests was... well it's literally standardized in about twenty different standards. Bit by bit, more and more private data falls under someone else's lock and key (or just use mal-sync like I do now then you kinda own your data... but the point is it is too unfortunate that mockery of basic sense is the first defense of... certain sorts... as is the general population's preference for nonsense over logical argument).
@Geth270 You should encourage everyone doing scanlation stuff to use Matrix instead of discord (at least until something better shows up). The discord webapp equivalent is called "Element" and was formerly known as Riot instant messenger.