Is anime1.com a legal site for watching anime?












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Other anime streaming sites are blocking my IP because I'm Iranian while anime1.com isn't. I wanted to know if it's legal to watch/stream anime from this site. Thanks.










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    5














    Other anime streaming sites are blocking my IP because I'm Iranian while anime1.com isn't. I wanted to know if it's legal to watch/stream anime from this site. Thanks.










    share|improve this question



























      5












      5








      5


      1





      Other anime streaming sites are blocking my IP because I'm Iranian while anime1.com isn't. I wanted to know if it's legal to watch/stream anime from this site. Thanks.










      share|improve this question















      Other anime streaming sites are blocking my IP because I'm Iranian while anime1.com isn't. I wanted to know if it's legal to watch/stream anime from this site. Thanks.







      anime-production






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      edited Nov 27 '18 at 22:38









      W. Are

      2,027426




      2,027426










      asked Nov 27 '18 at 20:36









      mhnajafi

      284




      284






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          11














          You might want to see this post: How can I tell if a site is Legal? It lists legal sites for streaming anime and reading/buying manga.



          Is anime1.com legal? Nope. An immediate indicator that a site is illegal is if it's laced with ads that are usually irrelevant to anime/manga in general. anime1.com's anime pages are almost filled up with ads and clicking on anime episode links results to pop-ups.



          'You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type,' as mentioned by @Rumplestiltskin. If a green padlock is present, that site is most likely secure and a 'Connection is secure' message will pop out whenever you click on it. This helps you avoid 'really dangerous anime-scam sites.' anime1.com does not have this so be wary of sites like these.



          Clarification: I just want to clarify something since people seem to misunderstand. The check for valid certificate is not a way to check for a site's legality. It is just for security purposes. There are many ways to check for a site's security but that, I think, is outside the scope of the question.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:40








          • 3




            An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:57










          • There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
            – Shadow
            Nov 28 '18 at 0:49










          • @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 1:07










          • For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
            – ratchet freak
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:13



















          2














          You can also check by looking at the anime selection and whether they could have a license for them. Quite a few anime are only licensed to a single site.



          For example as of this writing Violet Evergarden and Devilman Crybaby are Netflix exclusives and Evangelion is not licensed to any streaming site . If any other site provides them then they are pirated.



          Another method is by the player. A lot of pirate sites will outsource the actual video hosting by using embedded video players from other sites. Some have multiple such hosting sites that you can switch between.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:41



















          -3














          If a streaming site is offering you copyrighted material for free, you can be confident that site is not operating legally.



          However, watching/streaming anime (or other material) from a site is considered legal in many countries, even if the site itself is not legal. Whether this applies to your country would be better asked at law.stackexchange.com.



          Despite of what was suggested in the other answer, checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice, as nowadays any site can obtain those for free in just a few minutes with zero background checks through open certificate authorities like Let's Encrypt.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:13










          • @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
            – Kenji
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:54






          • 5




            FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:19






          • 4




            Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:30






          • 2




            To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
            – Makoto
            Nov 29 '18 at 4:40











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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          11














          You might want to see this post: How can I tell if a site is Legal? It lists legal sites for streaming anime and reading/buying manga.



          Is anime1.com legal? Nope. An immediate indicator that a site is illegal is if it's laced with ads that are usually irrelevant to anime/manga in general. anime1.com's anime pages are almost filled up with ads and clicking on anime episode links results to pop-ups.



          'You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type,' as mentioned by @Rumplestiltskin. If a green padlock is present, that site is most likely secure and a 'Connection is secure' message will pop out whenever you click on it. This helps you avoid 'really dangerous anime-scam sites.' anime1.com does not have this so be wary of sites like these.



          Clarification: I just want to clarify something since people seem to misunderstand. The check for valid certificate is not a way to check for a site's legality. It is just for security purposes. There are many ways to check for a site's security but that, I think, is outside the scope of the question.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:40








          • 3




            An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:57










          • There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
            – Shadow
            Nov 28 '18 at 0:49










          • @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 1:07










          • For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
            – ratchet freak
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:13
















          11














          You might want to see this post: How can I tell if a site is Legal? It lists legal sites for streaming anime and reading/buying manga.



          Is anime1.com legal? Nope. An immediate indicator that a site is illegal is if it's laced with ads that are usually irrelevant to anime/manga in general. anime1.com's anime pages are almost filled up with ads and clicking on anime episode links results to pop-ups.



          'You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type,' as mentioned by @Rumplestiltskin. If a green padlock is present, that site is most likely secure and a 'Connection is secure' message will pop out whenever you click on it. This helps you avoid 'really dangerous anime-scam sites.' anime1.com does not have this so be wary of sites like these.



          Clarification: I just want to clarify something since people seem to misunderstand. The check for valid certificate is not a way to check for a site's legality. It is just for security purposes. There are many ways to check for a site's security but that, I think, is outside the scope of the question.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:40








          • 3




            An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:57










          • There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
            – Shadow
            Nov 28 '18 at 0:49










          • @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 1:07










          • For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
            – ratchet freak
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:13














          11












          11








          11






          You might want to see this post: How can I tell if a site is Legal? It lists legal sites for streaming anime and reading/buying manga.



          Is anime1.com legal? Nope. An immediate indicator that a site is illegal is if it's laced with ads that are usually irrelevant to anime/manga in general. anime1.com's anime pages are almost filled up with ads and clicking on anime episode links results to pop-ups.



          'You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type,' as mentioned by @Rumplestiltskin. If a green padlock is present, that site is most likely secure and a 'Connection is secure' message will pop out whenever you click on it. This helps you avoid 'really dangerous anime-scam sites.' anime1.com does not have this so be wary of sites like these.



          Clarification: I just want to clarify something since people seem to misunderstand. The check for valid certificate is not a way to check for a site's legality. It is just for security purposes. There are many ways to check for a site's security but that, I think, is outside the scope of the question.






          share|improve this answer














          You might want to see this post: How can I tell if a site is Legal? It lists legal sites for streaming anime and reading/buying manga.



          Is anime1.com legal? Nope. An immediate indicator that a site is illegal is if it's laced with ads that are usually irrelevant to anime/manga in general. anime1.com's anime pages are almost filled up with ads and clicking on anime episode links results to pop-ups.



          'You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type,' as mentioned by @Rumplestiltskin. If a green padlock is present, that site is most likely secure and a 'Connection is secure' message will pop out whenever you click on it. This helps you avoid 'really dangerous anime-scam sites.' anime1.com does not have this so be wary of sites like these.



          Clarification: I just want to clarify something since people seem to misunderstand. The check for valid certificate is not a way to check for a site's legality. It is just for security purposes. There are many ways to check for a site's security but that, I think, is outside the scope of the question.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 28 '18 at 1:55

























          answered Nov 27 '18 at 21:28









          W. Are

          2,027426




          2,027426








          • 3




            Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:40








          • 3




            An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:57










          • There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
            – Shadow
            Nov 28 '18 at 0:49










          • @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 1:07










          • For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
            – ratchet freak
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:13














          • 3




            Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:40








          • 3




            An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 27 '18 at 22:57










          • There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
            – Shadow
            Nov 28 '18 at 0:49










          • @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 1:07










          • For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
            – ratchet freak
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:13








          3




          3




          Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 27 '18 at 22:40






          Just to add to the answer, You can also check the site information to confirm if they have a valid certificate and connection type. A legal site will always have the "Padlock resembling thingy" at the browser address and the connection will be secure. This will also help you avoid really dangerous "anime-scam" sites. Anime1 is clearly a dangerously illegal site since it lacks all 3
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 27 '18 at 22:40






          3




          3




          An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 27 '18 at 22:57




          An illegal site could have a secure connection thou, but if it does not have the symbol, then it is definitely illegal. The green padlock does not completely imply its legal cause I also use quite a bit illegal and secure anime sites myself lol
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 27 '18 at 22:57












          There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
          – Shadow
          Nov 28 '18 at 0:49




          There is no requirement for a legal site to use a certificate. It is likely that they will chose to - but whether a site is legal and whether is has a valid certificate are mutually exclusive.
          – Shadow
          Nov 28 '18 at 0:49












          @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
          – W. Are
          Nov 28 '18 at 1:07




          @Shadow As mentioned, the check for certificate and connection type is just for security purposes, not to determine if a site is legal or not. Personally, I would be wary if a so-called legal site does not have a valid certificate since all legal sites I visit have them.
          – W. Are
          Nov 28 '18 at 1:07












          For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
          – ratchet freak
          Nov 28 '18 at 9:13




          For example until recently Crunchyroll didn't have https. Even though it's a very large legal streaming site.
          – ratchet freak
          Nov 28 '18 at 9:13











          2














          You can also check by looking at the anime selection and whether they could have a license for them. Quite a few anime are only licensed to a single site.



          For example as of this writing Violet Evergarden and Devilman Crybaby are Netflix exclusives and Evangelion is not licensed to any streaming site . If any other site provides them then they are pirated.



          Another method is by the player. A lot of pirate sites will outsource the actual video hosting by using embedded video players from other sites. Some have multiple such hosting sites that you can switch between.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:41
















          2














          You can also check by looking at the anime selection and whether they could have a license for them. Quite a few anime are only licensed to a single site.



          For example as of this writing Violet Evergarden and Devilman Crybaby are Netflix exclusives and Evangelion is not licensed to any streaming site . If any other site provides them then they are pirated.



          Another method is by the player. A lot of pirate sites will outsource the actual video hosting by using embedded video players from other sites. Some have multiple such hosting sites that you can switch between.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3




            Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:41














          2












          2








          2






          You can also check by looking at the anime selection and whether they could have a license for them. Quite a few anime are only licensed to a single site.



          For example as of this writing Violet Evergarden and Devilman Crybaby are Netflix exclusives and Evangelion is not licensed to any streaming site . If any other site provides them then they are pirated.



          Another method is by the player. A lot of pirate sites will outsource the actual video hosting by using embedded video players from other sites. Some have multiple such hosting sites that you can switch between.






          share|improve this answer














          You can also check by looking at the anime selection and whether they could have a license for them. Quite a few anime are only licensed to a single site.



          For example as of this writing Violet Evergarden and Devilman Crybaby are Netflix exclusives and Evangelion is not licensed to any streaming site . If any other site provides them then they are pirated.



          Another method is by the player. A lot of pirate sites will outsource the actual video hosting by using embedded video players from other sites. Some have multiple such hosting sites that you can switch between.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 29 '18 at 0:42

























          answered Nov 28 '18 at 9:23









          ratchet freak

          24314




          24314








          • 3




            Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:41














          • 3




            Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 9:41








          3




          3




          Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
          – Aki Tanaka
          Nov 28 '18 at 9:41




          Tangential, but I read that Netflix is licensing Evangelion.
          – Aki Tanaka
          Nov 28 '18 at 9:41











          -3














          If a streaming site is offering you copyrighted material for free, you can be confident that site is not operating legally.



          However, watching/streaming anime (or other material) from a site is considered legal in many countries, even if the site itself is not legal. Whether this applies to your country would be better asked at law.stackexchange.com.



          Despite of what was suggested in the other answer, checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice, as nowadays any site can obtain those for free in just a few minutes with zero background checks through open certificate authorities like Let's Encrypt.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:13










          • @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
            – Kenji
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:54






          • 5




            FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:19






          • 4




            Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:30






          • 2




            To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
            – Makoto
            Nov 29 '18 at 4:40
















          -3














          If a streaming site is offering you copyrighted material for free, you can be confident that site is not operating legally.



          However, watching/streaming anime (or other material) from a site is considered legal in many countries, even if the site itself is not legal. Whether this applies to your country would be better asked at law.stackexchange.com.



          Despite of what was suggested in the other answer, checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice, as nowadays any site can obtain those for free in just a few minutes with zero background checks through open certificate authorities like Let's Encrypt.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:13










          • @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
            – Kenji
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:54






          • 5




            FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:19






          • 4




            Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:30






          • 2




            To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
            – Makoto
            Nov 29 '18 at 4:40














          -3












          -3








          -3






          If a streaming site is offering you copyrighted material for free, you can be confident that site is not operating legally.



          However, watching/streaming anime (or other material) from a site is considered legal in many countries, even if the site itself is not legal. Whether this applies to your country would be better asked at law.stackexchange.com.



          Despite of what was suggested in the other answer, checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice, as nowadays any site can obtain those for free in just a few minutes with zero background checks through open certificate authorities like Let's Encrypt.






          share|improve this answer












          If a streaming site is offering you copyrighted material for free, you can be confident that site is not operating legally.



          However, watching/streaming anime (or other material) from a site is considered legal in many countries, even if the site itself is not legal. Whether this applies to your country would be better asked at law.stackexchange.com.



          Despite of what was suggested in the other answer, checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice, as nowadays any site can obtain those for free in just a few minutes with zero background checks through open certificate authorities like Let's Encrypt.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 28 '18 at 1:23









          Kenji

          1




          1












          • Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:13










          • @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
            – Kenji
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:54






          • 5




            FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:19






          • 4




            Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:30






          • 2




            To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
            – Makoto
            Nov 29 '18 at 4:40


















          • Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
            – W. Are
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:13










          • @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
            – Kenji
            Nov 28 '18 at 2:54






          • 5




            FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
            – Aki Tanaka
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:19






          • 4




            Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
            – Rumpelstiltskin
            Nov 28 '18 at 3:30






          • 2




            To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
            – Makoto
            Nov 29 '18 at 4:40
















          Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
          – W. Are
          Nov 28 '18 at 2:13




          Hi. If you think that 'checking if the site has a valid certificate and secure connection is bad and even dangerous advice,' then please suggest a better way since this does not help the user who asked the question. This might not be the best solution but not checking if a site has a 'green padlock' or not is even worse advice :) Try to also limit the scope of your answer to the website in question.
          – W. Are
          Nov 28 '18 at 2:13












          @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
          – Kenji
          Nov 28 '18 at 2:54




          @W.Are The way I suggested is checking whether the site is giving copyrighted material away for free. Nigerian princes don't give money away for free and neither do movie studios give their works away for free :). Why I think it is dangerous to teach users to check for green padlocks is that either the website in question will add that green padlock or a user will visit another similar site which has the green padlock - and now the user thinks it is suddenly legal. Neither does that give any protection against that site misusing your credit card information or giving you malware.
          – Kenji
          Nov 28 '18 at 2:54




          5




          5




          FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
          – Aki Tanaka
          Nov 28 '18 at 3:19




          FWIW, Crunchyroll provides anime streaming for free and it's also legal though the anime choices are limited based on the watcher's country due to licensing. I think Funimation also provides it for free, but I can't test because it's geoblocked.
          – Aki Tanaka
          Nov 28 '18 at 3:19




          4




          4




          Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 28 '18 at 3:30




          Kenji, the presence of a certificate and secure connection does not imply its legal. However, a legally upright streaming site that provides copyrighted anime contents MUST have a VALID certificate and secure connection in order to protect the users private information. A legal streaming site without a valid certificate or secure connection puts its users information at risk of hackers, only an illegal site will care less about the consequences of such negligence for private information.
          – Rumpelstiltskin
          Nov 28 '18 at 3:30




          2




          2




          To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
          – Makoto
          Nov 29 '18 at 4:40




          To reinforce @AkiTanaka's point, I have a Funimation subscription and can watch certain Funimation shows for free. (Since I pay I can watch the paid stuff, too.)
          – Makoto
          Nov 29 '18 at 4:40


















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