Henti Net

Henti Net




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Henti Net
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Community-oriented image hosting and file sharing website focused on hentai

^ Spectre (8 April 2010). "How was this website created?" . E-Hentai. Archived from the original on 21 June 2020 . Retrieved 21 June 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Tenboro (27 March 2010). "So it has come to this, Achtung!" . E-Hentai Fourms. Archived from the original on 1 April 2010 . Retrieved 19 June 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Martinez, Ignacio (27 July 2019). "Fans are mourning the shutdown of hentai repository 'Sad Panda' " . The Daily Dot . Archived from the original on 28 July 2019 . Retrieved 19 June 2020 .

^ "Google eliminará páginas de anime pirata" . El Universal (in Spanish). 13 June 2019. Archived from the original on 4 July 2019 . Retrieved 7 September 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e Cole, Samantha (26 July 2019). " 'Dear Fucking God:' The 'Alexandria Library' of Hentai Has Suddenly Vanished" . Motherboard . Vice . Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 . Retrieved 19 June 2020 .

^ "娘子出嚟睇耶穌呀! 「傷心熊貓」Exhentai關站7日後原地復活" . HK01 . 3 August 2019. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019 . Retrieved 21 June 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b Noppe, Nele (2014). The cultural economy of fanwork in Japan: dōjinshi exchange as a hybrid economy of open source cultural goods (PhD thesis). University of Leuven. Archived from the original on 2021-03-20 . Retrieved 2021-04-19 .

^ Tenboro (26 July 2019). "A Message to the Community" . E-Hentai. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019 . Retrieved 27 July 2021 .

^ Kaartinen, Sami Johannes (2017). Where, How and Why? Fan Translations Unraveled: A Study of the Fan Translation Process Through Personal Experience (PDF) (Master's thesis). University of Vaasa. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-07-28 . Retrieved 2020-06-22 .


E-Hentai is an image-hosting and file-sharing website focused on hentai (Japanese cartoon pornography ). The site hosts user-generated image galleries primarily of pornographic content originating or derived from anime , manga , and video games , such as fanart , scanlations of manga and dōjinshi , and cosplay photographs. Its sister site Exhentai (colloquially known as Sad Panda ) was spun off from E-Hentai in 2010 to host artwork that depicts material that is illegal in certain jurisdictions , such as lolicon , shotacon , and bestiality .

E-Hentai launched as a Yahoo! Group on July 1, 1999. The group moved to a .net domain in 2001 before moving to its current .org domain in 2005 after ownership of its .net domain lapsed and was purchased by another party. [1] On March 27, 2010, E-Hentai announced that in response to pressure from advertisers, it would no longer host artwork depicting underage characters ( lolicon and shotacon ) and bestiality . Existing galleries containing this content were deleted from the site, amounting to the removal of approximately 30,000 of the website's 150,000 galleries; this content was later spun off onto Exhentai, a sister site to E-Hentai. [2] Access to Exhentai requires an existing E-Hentai account; for individuals without an account, Exhentai appears as a blank page with an illustration of a crying panda , and has consequently has earned the nickname "Sad Panda" among users of the site. [3] In June 2019, both sites were removed from Google , per the company's policy of de-listing websites that violate the Digital Millennium Copyright Act . [4]

On July 26, 2019, E-Hentai and Exhentai announced that both sites would shut down in response to "recent legislative changes in the Netherlands ", where the servers of the sites were hosted at the time. [2] Vice speculated that the shutdown was in reaction to the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market adopted by the European Union in June 2019, which makes digital platforms legally liable for material posted by users that violates copyright, as well as a July 2019 proposal by Dutch Minister of Justice Ferdinand Grapperhaus to impose harsher punishments on websites that do not rapidly remove child pornography. [5] 24 hours' notice was given for the shutdown of Exhentai, leading users on the image board 4chan to attempt to archive the entire site before it closed on July 27. [5] On August 2, 2019, Exhentai relaunched after its servers relocated to Moldova . [6]

Works posted to E-Hentai and Exhentai are typically pirated and are uploaded without the consent or knowledge of the original creators. [7] The site is owned and operated by an anonymous moderator who uses the handle Tenboro [5] and is funded through a combination of advertising revenue and donations; in 2009, E-Hentai estimated its annual hosting costs at USD$ 46,000, with donations covering "less than half" of operating costs. [2] In 2019, Tenboro stated that a persistent tendon injury limited their ability to perform timely maintenance on the website and that they were considering options for its future, such as naming a successor moderator or preserving the website as a permanent archive. [5] [8]

Collectively, E-Hentai and Exhentai are one of the largest databases of hentai manga and contain over 100,000 image galleries. [9] The site hosts both original Japanese hentai manga and scanlations in multiple languages, including Chinese, English, French, German, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Thai. [7] At its peak popularity, the commercial web traffic company Alexa ranked E-Hentai as the 264th-most popular website on the internet. [3] Outlets have noted that E-Hentai functions as a de facto archive for artwork that is rare or non-existent on other physical and digital platforms; the site hosts content such as Comiket -exclusive works ( dōjin ) and out-of-print art books that are both pornographic and non-pornographic in nature, with Vice calling the website the " Alexandria Library [ sic ] of hentai". [5] [3] The Daily Dot described E-Hentai as "a relic of 'the old internet ' ", citing it as an example of niche portals for digital content that predate contemporary social media . [3]

July 1, 1999 ; 23 years ago ( 1999-07-01 )

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Posted Fri 28 Feb 2020 at 9:51pm Friday 28 Feb 2020 at 9:51pm Fri 28 Feb 2020 at 9:51pm
abc.net.au/news/mps-wants-review-of-classification-laws-for-manga-and-anime/12012522
Posted 28 Feb 2020 28 Feb 2020 Fri 28 Feb 2020 at 9:51pm
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Anime and manga depicting sexual images of children spark calls for review of classification laws
Two South Australian crossbench politicians are calling for an urgent review of classification laws, after discovering videos and comic books sold in Australia that depict sexual images of children, including rape scenes.
SA Best Upper House MP Connie Bonaros has been investigating Japanese anime and manga publications and found many for sale that she believed should not have got past the Classification Board.
"They are effectively regulating this material like they would a video game or like they would a film, but they are doing so in isolation of our criminal law," Ms Bonaros said.
"Our federal criminal code clearly says that this material would meet the definition of child exploitation material and therefore should not be available at all."
Ms Bonaros has found titles with themes of incest, rape and sexual abuse — all involving children.
That includes animation Eromanga Sensai where a 15-year-old boy and his 12-year-old sister create pornographic comics together, or comic book No Game No Life where an 18-year-old boy and his 11-year-old sister enter an online gaming world.
She said these publications were available in bookshops and DVD stores around Australia.
"You have Astro Boy and Pokemon and in amongst all that material there are titles which clearly contain material that meets the definition of child exploitation material," Ms Bonaros said.
"Themes of minors involved in incest and rape, sexual abuse — the choice was absolutely endless."
Ms Bonaros's federal colleague, Centre Alliance senator Stirling Griff, has joined her campaign, launching a motion in Parliament calling for an urgent review of classification regulations.
"Experts that advocate against child exploitation have referred to this type of anime and manga as a gateway to the abuse of actual children," Senator Griff said.
"Experts also say that explicit anime and manga can be used by paedophiles as tools to groom children.
"It makes me sick to the stomach to even speak about this."
There have been cases in Australia where people have been prosecuted for possessing child exploitation material, even though the images are drawings rather than actual photographs.
But the Classification Board granted Eromanga Sensai an MA15+ rating, saying: "The film contains strong themes that are justified by context."
While all videos pass through the Classification Board, it only looks at comic books if they are submitted, and it is up to the book's distributors to decide if it needs to be classified.
Ms Bonaros and Senator Griff want this changed and are calling for an ongoing review of classification regulations to extend the board's oversight to printed materials.
"The board is aware that a campaign has been launched about the sale of Japanese manga and anime in Australia and that in the context of the Government's review of classification regulation this issue has been raised," the Classification Board said in a statement.
Fans of anime and manga have defended the industry, pointing out the majority of publications are not pornographic.
The owner of Adelaide store Shin Tokyo, William Chappell, said the artform had a 60-year history, and like other parts of the entertainment industry, content could range from child-friendly through to pornographic.
He said while the Classification Board was experienced in dealing with the material, he was still careful about what he sold in his shop.
"We're a family-friendly store so we're really careful ordering products," he said.
"We look at how female characters are portrayed and there are quite a lot of products that we decide aren't suitable."
"That's where we are just extremely careful and we just say 'hey, if it looks bad, we're just not going to stock it'."
Ms Bonaros took up the campaign of child exploitation material in anime and manga after travelling to Japan to push for child-like sex dolls to be banned .
For survivors of child sexual abuse, reading the details of crimes can provoke a wide range of emotions. We spoke to experts about how to deal with triggering, traumatic news.
"The trip to Japan was a bit of an eye-opener in many regards," she said.
"Obviously, when I went there I wasn't aware of the extent of the problem of manga."
Ms Bonaros said laws in Japan did not consider drawings to be child exploitation material , but there were groups there campaigning for it to be banned.
She said she wanted to help Japanese activists who believed pressure from other countries would help their cause.
"They need external pressure — they need their politicians to understand that the rest of the world doesn't look at this material through the same lens that they do," Ms Bonaros said.
"There is a lot of pressure being applied at the moment in Japan, but it is being done very discreetly, so what they've told me is the more help they can get from external countries, the more hope they have of making some inroads in terms of ensuring that their child exploitation laws are stronger."
1800 Respect , National counselling helpline: 1800 737 732
Bravehearts , counselling and support for survivors of child sexual abuse: 1800 272 831
Child Wise , counselling provider: 1800 991 099
Lifeline , 24-hour crisis support and suicide prevention: 13 11 14
PartnerSPEAK , peer support for non-offending partners: (03) 9018 7872
We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.
This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.
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Published: 22:55 BST, 29 October 2020 | Updated: 22:55 BST, 29 October 2020
A popular animated form of Japanese pornography has been banned in Australia due to its depictions of rape and child sexual abuse.
The Australia Border Force has stepped in recently after a number of imported Hentai images depicted rape, incest and sexual abuse.  
Leading Japanese adult retailer J-List posted a statement online earlier this month claiming the Australian Border Force and customs had started to block all their adult products from entering the country.  
A popular animated form of Japanese pornography - Hentai - is now banned in Australia. Pictured is an anime novel at a Tokyo bookstore
'DHL Japan called us last week, informing us that Australian customs have started rejecting packages containing any adult product,' the company said in a statement. 
'They then advised us to stop sending adult products to the country. Following that, current Australian orders with adult items in them were returned to us this week.' 
Earlier this year, several South Australian politicians called for an urgent review of the nation's federal classification laws after discovering that a number of comic books and videos being sold in Australian showed highly sexual images of children—including scenes of rape, incest, and sexual abuse.
A shocked Connie Bonaros, South Australia's Best Upper House MP, said the choice of content for minors was 'absolutely endless.' 
In 2015, a 52-year-old man in Adelaide was given a suspended jail sentence for having more than 300 anime images classed as child pornography.
During sentencing, Judge Paul Muscat noted although the man thought what he was doing was 'similar to reading or taking part in a fantasy rather than contributing to the production of child exploitation material', it was not 'that great a step' to go from that to viewing material of actual, real-life child exploitation.
The Australian Border Force and customs have started to block all their adult products from entering the country (file image of adult graphic novels in a Tokyo comic bookstore)
'Does it matter that most of the images you accessed on the internet were anime? On a limited assessment it must, for no actual child was being sexually abused,' Judge Muscat said. 
'However, as I previously observed, the concern is that those who view anime will go on to view images of actual children being sexually abused.' 
Daily Mail Australia has contacted the ABF for comment. 
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