We will continue supporting scanlators in every way possible. I believe that when a legal alternative does not exist, scanlation is necessary to fill in the void and show the publishers/artists that there is demand for their work outside of Japan. I've talked about this before and
here is a pretty good post detailing my thoughts. I believe the end goal of scanlation is to live in a world where all material (magazines, books, doujinshi, etc), is published legally in the language you're looking for, at a quality worth paying for, and at the same time it's available in Japan. We are going to build towards that goal and
simulpublishing the two biggest hentai magazines in Japan is a first step.
The reality of the situation (specifically with FAKKU as a business) is that we need to remove unlicensed content to secure more publishing deals and ensure that all artists are comfortable working with us. Our current partners are okay turning a blind eye to the unlicensed content on FAKKU, but that will not always be the case.
On a personal note, I am a huge advocate of free speech and as I've always said we will not be censoring any content we publish. We already work with the CBLDF, but keeping unlicensed content on the website prevents us from being able to fully support them. Specifically I want FAKKU to become a corporate sponsor of the
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund so we can continue to support those freedoms. P.S.
Donate.
It sucks that the majority of content on FAKKU will disappear, but we will be replacing it with new content that won't be available anywhere else. Our end goal will be to eventually bring back all of the unlicensed content officially through FAKKU, and this is the first step towards that.
Here is a rough timeline for content removal, this is not final and will most likely change.
06/2015: Removal of some specific unlicensed publishers and unlicensed controversial content
12/2015: Removal of remaining unlicensed content