Postby Fish and Chips » Fri Apr 02, 2010 10:16 am
To preface this post, CAA does not support nor condone linking unofficial and unauthorized sites for reading Manga online, licensed or otherwise.
There is currently no legal way of reading Manga extensively online. At most, some licensors will uploaded a few pages of preview materials, occasionally a full chapter, but that's really about it.
So your answer is there isn't one.
However, the relationship between Manga license holders and Manga scanlation is a precautious one, the sort that occupies a gray vacuum. Jason Thompson, for example, a self-publicized employee and editor of VIZ Media, has frequently alluded to and even provided links to scan sites. After traveling to Japan and apparently having a brief conversation with Fairy Tail's Hiro Mashima, Mashima decided to draw Thompson in his next chapter as a cameo, a cameo Thompson invited followers on his blog to read by posting a link to a scan site containing the entirety of Fairy Tail. It's not an isolated incident either; in his JoJo's Bizarre Adventure FAQ, almost within the same breath that he mentioned JoJo would be licensed and published by VIZ, Thompson provided several links to sites about the series, including several for the express purpose of reading online. It should also be noted that Jason Thompson is the top editor assigned to JoJo's publication.
There's also Dark Horse. Dark Horse traditionally doesn't like or permit online copies of anything they distribute, and tend to be pretty swift in removing them. That said, one of their staff apparently consented to discuss several details of the American release of Berserk with a particular Berserk-related board known to distributed RAWs, translations, and scanlations of the series among registered members.
The conclusion we can draw from this is tentative, but roughly that scanlations are permitted to exist by the industry in a sort of neutral legal limbo. This does not make scanlations or sites that distribute them legal, rather, it implies a certain level of understanding between the two groups, recognition of the service scanlators provide to their audience coupled with the ramifications it could have on book sales by license holders. Most prominent groups I'm aware of who do these unofficial translations and scans tend to include a request to their readers to buy the Manga where commercially available, and some even close up shop completely (though this is becoming rare these days). Granted, you will always have pirates who simply leech off the system and contribute nothing, but they would exist even if scanlations were actively legislated to a criminal extreme.
So ideally, ideally here people, the community works for the convenience and publicity of readers to fill the gap before Manga licensors distribute their titles. However, that only more makes it our responsibility to support Manga financially in America.