Chris4150 {from another thread} wrote:Actually, I have no problems spotting a bootleg off the bat. What I was wanting to know is if the HK bootleg DVD's are considered the 'official' anime DVD's of Hong Kong, or do they have official companies that officially publish anime?
Well, it's usually a given that any Hong Kong anime DVD distribution company will have legal rights to distribute their wares in Hong Kong and the surrounding region, so yeah, I'd call them the 'official' anime DVDs of Hong Kong.
The rub is when these companies sell their products to other distributors who then in turn ship these DVDs (or whatever) out of the region and try hawking them in other countries outside the region-of-origin.
To dovetail with Ashley's last comment on US customs, I'm no expert on the specifics on what US Customs accepts or rejects, but I'm leaning on the hunch that USC doesn't look at everything coming into the US (even despite 9-11) and doesn't have the ability to track every instance of every type of product trying to come here and see if it's a legitimate product that's allowed to be sold here or not.
Not barring blatant illegal goods (W.o.M.D., slaves, illegal immigrants, drugs, weapons, etc.), everything else is basically given the OK unless it's "clear" to the customs inspectors that a particular item is not allowed, and that *at the time of the inspection*.
All of this is a guess, and I may be wrong on several points here. If anyone here in the CAA is a Customs person, please correct me.
Anyways, because items get past US Customs doesn't specifically mean that the product is "100% legal". If a distributor wants to make extra $$ selling a product in the US that was originally licensed to be sold in China/Taiwan, he/she will devise ways to make the product show up in the US - falsifying cargo manifests, making ambiguous descriptions, and even packaging items to be less noticeable to inspectors (more likely the second method).
Looking in the FAQ, a classic example of this is the Son May CDs from Taiwan. They're legit products to be sold *only* in Taiwan, but somehow boxes and boxes of these CDs make it to just about every import CD shop in the US and are sold at horrendously cutthroat prices compared to the domestic labels of the same music. Somehow these CDs got past Customs and made it to their recipients... so why can't it be with other products?
So to get back to your original question, Chris4150, its really boils down to the company that is distributing the poduct you're looking at, and what legal license they have to distribute the product in the area you're buying it at.
Now, direct purchasing from the distributor or producer/manufacturer of the product, regardless of where it's made, may still be legal, and override any distribution restrictions placed on said distributor (online purchasing makes this really widespread). If you *go to them*, that's ok... they just can't set up a shop outside their licensed distribution area to *go to you*.
Some research in US Customs and Import law may help shed light on this issue.