Yeah if you want to be completely in the clear, just stick to Crunchyroll, Hulu, etc. The technicalities can get convoluted on how you choose to define "right" such as using a site which only links to 3rd party streaming site which happens to be an illegally uploaded video. How "wrong" that is is worthless debate. It's just a matter of your own conscience, as the chances of authorities bothering to do anything about it is essentially zero while anything fansubbed is illegal material to begin with. Manga sites are pretty much all illegal. I believe there is like one or two examples of sites trying to do it legally but they never had success. Of course, within the realm of illegal manga sites, there are a bunch of definitions of what is "right" and "wrong" due to certain sites profiting off others' work, etc. but I won't go into detail with that. If you want the best (illegal) option for manga, go straight to the source and visit the actual translators' websites.
skreyola wrote:The selection on the legitimate sites is sometimes frustrating, but what else can you do without depriving the artists of their due profit?
I don't believe in the idea that watching/reading illegally obtained anime/manga hurts sales or the creator - if it weren't for piracy, anime would never have exploded in the West to what it is today. The relationship between piracy and Japan's anime-related industry is more complex than "depriving due profit." I mean, Japan never even cared about foreigners until very recently. A few years ago, you couldn't watch subbed anime legally, so there was no "profit" to deprive because it was either watch illegally or don't watch at all. It wasn't even a matter of waiting because the vast majority would never get dubs or subs. There have been times where fansubbers went straight to the creators and asked for permission. Sometimes they were allowed to, even though the fansubs never directly made a cent for the creator (but it eventually turned over revenue through fans who decided to buy goods - which is monetarily no different than piracy that didn't ask for permission resulting in sales). There are also cases in the VN industry where the companies adopted fan translations, which actually
saved them money and time. So yeah, it's certainly illegal, but are you really depriving profit when there is no legal way to do it and the illegal way has historically boosted sales and popularity? With no legal way to get subs, piracy is closer to free advertisement than robbing profits. Also consider that Crunchyroll was originally one of those illegal sites making money off anime yet is now essentially the flagship of legal subbed anime streaming lol.
"It was then that I found the darkness in my heart, but I wanted to become a strong person who didn't yield to such weakness." - Nana Mizuki