The untimely death (and speedy resurrection) of scans_daily

I alluded to this in yesterday’s post, but as the internets have swelled up in indignation and outrage, I feel it deserves a bit more ink. (If you’re missing scans_daily and just want your fix back, go to the end of the post for the links.)

Scans_daily, in case you just got internet this week, is (was) a LiveJournal community where the members posted scans of sections of comic books and commented on them. I was an infrequent visitor, myself. It was slightly better organized than MySpace Comics but still suffered from that thing where you have to sit and wait for each image to download. My biggest problem with it, actually, was that they didn’t put whole issues or story arcs online, so I would see just the sample and not know how it ended.

Some copyright holder somewhere had just the opposite problem—they felt scans_daily was posting too much of their comics—and they complained to LJ, and now the whole site is gone, because it does, in fact, flagrantly violate LJ’s terms of service, and the fact that they have been doing so for five years doesn’t really exonerate them.

The exact sequence of events is a bit sketchy. Continue reading

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Links: Robot Comics wants creators, new Horrocks site coming

Attention creators: Robot Comics is looking for submissions for comics to run on the Android mobile phone platform. Even non-creators might want to click the link to see the demo.

The Manga Recon reviewers have a roundtable discussion of digital comics that’s worth reading even if you aren’t into manga, because they cover a lot of general issues from a fan’s point of view—keeping the book vs. reading it once, reading it on the screen vs. paper, and of course, the all-important question of cost. I might point out, too, that although the recieved wisdom at the moment is that no one pays for content on the internet, several of the reviewers are fans of Netcomics, which allows you to read manga online for 25 cents per chapter. They also discuss their favorite non-manga webcomics.

According to this report at Comics Should Be Good, longtime favorite Scans_Daily is gone, its account suspended by LiveJournal for violating its terms of service by posting copyrighted material. According to that last link, they are looking for a new home and trying to preserve what they can. Stay tuned.

Something to look forward to: Dylan Horrocks is launching a webcomics site next week.

Over at Comics 411, Tom Mason talks to Larry Latham about Lovecraft Is Missing, which starts with the notion that the stories of H.P. Lovecraft were based on real events. Latham talks about the story as well as the webcomics experience. Good stuff.

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Digital Strips 157 – Zuda Watch Feb 2009

Another month has come and gone and with it 10 more comics have come to compete for your love and approval. Go check them out quick before your opinion won’t matter anymore.

Listen in and let us know who you agree with (me) and who is full of it (Jason).

Digital Strips 157 – Zuda Watch Feb 2009

edit– made some changes to the sound file, it should be fine unless you can only hear the left ear track, then you’ll hear nothing. If there are any audacity experts out there I have questions.

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Tom Mason ~INTERVIEWS~ Norm Feuti, creator of Gill and Retail

Tom Mason of Comix 411 has an interview up with Norm Feuti, creator of the syndicated strip, Retail, and the webcomic, Gill. As a recent convert to Feuti’s work (Feutism? Feutistic?) I am currently reading through this interview with the man who has captured childhood essence and combined it with adult sensibilities (Gill) and you should do the same.

Also, keep your eyes peeled and ears perked up for a future mini-review of Gill on an upcoming Horizons Watch podcast!

P.S. Newspaper sites take note: it took me forever to find a decent way to view Retail, and even then it wasn’t the best. Tyler Martin has already done it for you, just use it and we’ll all be better off.

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Q&A With Tom Dell’Aringa ~ON~ Marooned, Print Viability, and How To Make Webcomics

Like many webcomics creators and comics creators who will soon be webcartoonists whether they like it or not, Tom Dell’Aringa is struggling to grasp the idea of finding success with his space-comedy comic, Marooned. The Webcomic Idol finalist is looking for answers to his most burning questions, so take a look at what he’s dealing with and see what you think.

Digital Strips: Thanks again for taking the time to offer us some insight into your process and thoughts on the subjects again, Tom! It’s much appreciated. With these questions, I’m just trying to get a feel for who you are as a creator and what your process is. Details like this can always help struggling or new creators to establish themselves so the more you have to say, the better.

Tom Dell’Aringa: Glad to help!

sketch022009

I don’t think they’re ok…

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Links: Left to our own devices

Writing at Broken Frontier, Tyler Chin-Tanner is tired of all the gloom-and-doom surrounding Diamond’s new minimums, and he offers a sensible business plan for those who just can’t quit making comics:

Step 1. Put your heart and soul into creating the best comic you can, one that will resonate with its readers.

Step 2. Get as many people as possible to read this comic.

His point: The end of the road may have come for floppies, but not for comics; there will be other ways to survive, but first you have to have the content.

Not only that, you have to market it properly. At Comics Worth Reading, Johanna Draper Carlson takes a look at a clumsy attempt to repurpose a print comic as a webcomic—at a higher price point.

On the other hand, this article about the founder of 4Chan is a bit troubling, because it makes the point that eyeballs don’t always equal dollars: The guy not only launched one of the most successful websites evarrr, he also created the highly lucrative ICanHasCheezburger meme, which made a lot of money for someone else, and contributed to the revival of Rick Astley’s career. And yet not only is he not making any money off 4Chan, he’s paying the server fees with his credit cards.

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Future Schlock

Hey, there’s another webcomics business-model brouhaha on the internets! Valerie D’Orazio got the latest snowball rolling down the mountain with this post at Occasional Superheroine, in which she predicts that Big Media will take over webcomics and find a way to monetize them:

1) If I was DC or Marvel (or any other media company), I’d pinpoint what the top 5% webcomics are. Offer those web cartoonists competitive exclusive distribution deals that includes a health insurance component. Then make a subscription-based site offset by sales of hard copies and merchandise.

An essential part of her argument is that the Big Two convey “authoritativeness,” versus the “amateur” status of most webcomics. In fact, she sees this happening with the internet in general:

The media companies are going to push “Authoritative” vs. “Amateur” within two years. Look for an all-out assault on the authority of blogs that are not connected with one media group or another. Look for the top-of-the-top independent blogs to get bought up by media companies. Look for an all-out assault on the credibility of Wikipedia.

D’Orazio seems to have missed several fundamental points. Continue reading

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The Web Comic Enema Continues with You’ll Have That

The next comic in my list is a sad one. Not “My mom ran over my dog today” kind of sad or even “we’re out of ice cream” sad. This is more of a “My best friend got a really hot girl friend” kind of sad. I’m happy for the comic, there’s just no place for me in its life anymore.

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The Comic: You’ll Have That

The Creator: Wes Molebash

The URL: www.yhtcomic.com

The Verdict: Honorable Discharge

Not too much I can say about You’ll Have That that hasn’t already been said. It was great. Now it’s over. I’m sad about that, but I’m tired of skipping over the link every morning. It’s time for me to move on.

If you’ve never read YHT, go read it now. If you tried reading it in the past and have since found yourself in a serious relationship, go read it now. Molebash took the slice of life, it’s funny because it’s true, relationship comic genre and mad it his own. Andy and Katie are such realistic characters, I feel like I actually know them. And unlike the characters at QC, I wouldn’t feel intimidated going up to them at a party or something.

Molebash has decided to delay his next comic endeavor to let it mature for a bit. Since mature is one of the first words I think of when I think of YHT (and not the immature kind of mature like the comics with giraffe’s with boobies) I’m sure this can only be a good decision. If not a heart breaking one.

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Links: All around the blogosphere

Opportunity knocks: The Daily Cross Hatch is looking for some guest strips.

At Robot 6, JK Parkin interviews Thom Zahler, creator of Love and Capes.

Blog@Newsarama chats with Dean Haspiel, the prolific creator of Immortal, Fear, My Dear, Street Code, and a heap of other stuff.

And Jennifer Contino talks to Mike Dawson about Jack & Max Escape from the End of Time at The Pulse.

Larry Cruz has a thorough discussion of characters at the Webcomic Overlook.

NYCC reports continue to trickle in. At Wednesday’s Child, Paul DeBenedetto recounts the Comics and New Media panel, which apparently consisted entirely of people associated with A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge. It’s a great comic, but Paul was disappointed by the panel.

Literary webcomics: Tom Gauld does pithy, colorful little drawings based on letters to the Guardian Saturday Review letters page. Many are cutely enigmatic, made more so by the fact that he doesn’t reproduce the letters they refer to. (Thanks to Derik Badman, via Twitter.)

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Call To Arms ~FOR~ Karen Ellis

By now you’ve probably seen at least one story about Karen Ellis, creator of Planet Karen, and the fire that engulfed her apartment building, killing the neighbor upstairs and destroying everything she owned, leaving her essentially homeless.

It’s been proven, time and time again, that the webcomics community can work some amazing magic when someone is in need, and Karen needs as much as you can give right now. She’s since updated (via extremely sporadic Internet access) that she appreciates any donation and that giving actual, physical items right now is more of a burden as she has nowhere to put it.

Visit Karen’s page and click the donate button on the right side to give whatever you can to this webcomic creator in need.

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