Tag: web

  • Pojo Blatantly Steals Daizenshuu EX Article

    I live in the real world. Let’s all be honest, here — the web exists as it does today because people lift content from each other. News aggregators, forums, social networking… today’s Internet is a fuster cluck of occasionally-attributed content reposted and repurposed. For the most part, I subscribe to the Techdirt view on content “borrowing” — if my content is good and you take it, more people are experiencing/reading/hearing my content, and that can only mean good things for me. It can mean one of two things for you (“you” being the “borrower”), though: (1) you become viewed as a valuable source of content filtering and presentation, or (2) you look incredibly stupid.

    Let’s share an example of #2, shall we?

    I received an e-mail this morning from someone named Brad, apparently one of our visitors over at Daizenshuu EX, with the subject header “Pojo ripped your Dragon Box article.” Assuming that Pojo was still an incomplete and haphazardly-run shell of a website made in 1999, I was pretty intrigued by what I was about to see.

    pojo_article_steal_1

    Look familiar to you? It should… minus the broken images and removed-introduction, of course.

    pojo_article_steal_2

    That’s pretty astonishing to me. I can totally understand the viewpoint of some punk kid taking an article from another website and posting it up on his own, especially one so uneducated as to not hot-link the images. What takes it to a new level is the deliberate action(s) taken with it. The introductory paragraph about it being both a history lesson and emotional-roller-coaster is entirely removed, presumably because it mentions us by name as Daizenshuu EX right in the text. If the broken images weren’t a hint to the carelessness, though, this should take the cake:

    pojo_article_steal_3

    Seriously?

    I have no idea who “ptrunks19” is, but I think he’s a pretty hilarious guy (or girl; let’s be an equal-opportunity laugher, here). The entire thing is so asininely careless that you can’t help but roll over in a fit of hysterics. What clinches it is the main page update, which (in addition to the “article” page itself), directly attributes the writing with a by-line to “ptrunks19”:

    pojo_article_steal_4

    Who the Hell is running this site? Do they have any idea what they’re doing? Does anyone actually visit this site for this type of content…?

    At the end of the day, I think we all know that there are really only two English-language DragonBall websites you need to bother with, and that’s a pretty good feeling.

  • Search Referrals Across The World

    Following up a little bit on my post about rankings on Google a little bit, I just wanted to share another behind-the-scenes doo-diddy with Daizenshuu EX. I have always touted the site as a “global fandom” resource. The Japanese version of the DragonBall series is the sole version that can be (and is) appreciated throughout the entire world, and that is our audience. As a testament to that, what I specifically would like to share is a list of the last twenty search engine referrals’ origins by country as I’m looking at them right now, with 15 of the 20 specifically looking for a variation on either “daizex” or “daizenshuu ex”:

    • Brazil
    • Japan
    • Croatia
    • United States
    • Japan
    • United States
    • Australia
    • Italy
    • Japan
    • Netherlands
    • Australia
    • Germany
    • Japan
    • United States
    • Netherlands
    • Spain
    • Denmark
    • Italy
    • United States

    That’s just beautiful, and I feel like we’re actually accomplishing something…! Let’s get Daizenshuu EX as a household name in Uzbekistan, and I think I could call it a day.