doesn't really claim to be legal (just says that they offer things that aren't licensed in the US).
They probably didn't even subtitle any of these themselves. Check the series that they have under the "Anime" link. It even lists who the sub group was.
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Anonymous2005-12-20 3:16
>Q: Is this legal?
>A: Yes, it's legal.
... sounds like a claim to be legal to me.
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Anonymous2005-12-20 3:45
Ah, the best way to make money is to take advantage of ignorance.
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Anonymous2005-12-20 9:33
lol
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Anonymous2005-12-20 12:05
There was a free site called Satellite 90 or something. Download all the crappy, subbed anime you want segmented into ninety real video segments.
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Anonymous2005-12-20 13:09
Real Video? F that.
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Anonymous2005-12-20 17:00
Don't understand why anyone would need this. The way die-hard fans seed anime torrents, I'm practically getting my full download speed anyway. I've never had a problem getting a popular anime to download within a few days, only rare stuff that I should be getting on DVD import anyway.
Look at Bleach or One Piece. The newest episodes are seeded by thousands of people within days of release. There's no reason to go to a company.
You say it like it's okay to charge people if they are the ones timing and doing the translations. Besides, they're charging for server cost. I don't see anything wrong with covering up expenses. If people still choose to pay even though they can get it for free, then it's the leecher's own fault for not trying to learn p2p and not whoever hosts the site.