Discussion about DMM website

  • Throughout the month of April 2024, participate in the FileJoker Thread Contest OPEN TO EVERYONE!

    From 1st to 30th of April 2024, members can earn cash rewards by posting Filejoker-Exclusive threads in the Direct-Downloads subforums.

    There are $1000 in prizes, and the top prize is $450!

    For the full rules and how to enter, check out the thread
  • Akiba-Online is sponsored by FileJoker.

    FileJoker is a required filehost for all new posts and content replies in the Direct Downloads subforums.

    Failure to include FileJoker links for Direct Download posts will result in deletion of your posts or worse.

    For more information see
    this thread.

wares

Member
Nov 18, 2008
31
9
Did you end up finding a solution? I'm also having trouble finding anything that'll work in ripping video from sokmil.
StreamFab works, it's not cheap though. The first "rip" I did was just OBS, but that's worse quality.
StreamFab: https://www.dvdfab.cn/downloader.htm
OBS: https://obsproject.com
I bought StreamFab for some other use cases. I contacted their support, via the forums and pointed out that Sokmil didn't work and they got it working.
wares.
 
  • Like
Reactions: javr

Walle12

JAV VR needs less clothes and more lesbian
Dec 6, 2008
1,369
744
We finally know what's going on with R18 first hand. SexLikeReal, a VR porn site, has explained it on Reddit. They're under attack too:

"I will be perfectly blunt and honest with the community about what is happening: One major credit card in particular is cracking down hard across the globe on various "high risk" industries. I'm sure most users on this sub are already familiar with Japanese megasite R18. Well they got cut off from this credit card because too many Japanese videos break the rules. They lost half their international revenue overnight and a chunk of their domestic revenue as a result.

What are the rules? That's a great question and as soon as we know them for sure we'll tell you. But they won't tell us, either. They give some rough guidelines but they're incredibly vague and written in such a way that they basically retain the right to interpret anything how they prefer.

This is not unique to us and it effects other companies that produce and / or distribute content as well, but the enforcement is just as patchy as the rules. We can post a video that feels edgy and taboo one day, and then the next day we receive an e-mail from someone outside the company needing an explanation about the bottle of wine on the table in one of the scenes. A scene not only needs to be completely legal, it needs to look completely legal. OnlyFans, a site invented for sexy people to build a community of content followers, briefly just said "fuck it" to porn as a whole. Even YouTube is tightening down rules on all kinds of content and demonetizing channels across the board in categories like gambling and talking about drug use. Even educational material.

This is one of those hazards that's hard to avoid as a multi-national company working across financial regulations and legal hurdles around the globe.

We are radically against censorship, but we are also powerless here. If it were actually a legal fight we might be able to do more, but if a credit card or payment processor doesn't want to do business with you, there's little you can do.

Pornhub was publicly slashed to ribbons in the media for uploads that we all know they did everything in their power to stop. The same just happened to R18. These are some of the largest sites in the world, and SLR is the largest VR porn site. When the pressure came down for us (as I can almost promise it will come for all adult sites) SLR could have made sweeping, fast fixes. And at first we did by rapidly deactivating anything even remotely controversial, and then we started watching them - individually tagging problem frames, timestaps, and videos. We go through our content and the content of EVERY studio that uploads. By the way - did you know we're hiring? We could use the help. :-D

We sincerely hope this is only a speed bump because we're staunchly against censorship, but we don't just want to tell the community why we've had to make new restrictions, we want to get the message out to other content creators: now is the time to be cautious and careful. The morality police already knocked on Pornhub's door, R18's door, and our door. Those are some of the biggest houses in the neighborhood, sure, but there are a lot of houses to go and they've got plenty of time to get to them."
 

AceRothstein

Active Member
Jul 13, 2019
177
229
We finally know what's going on with R18 first hand. SexLikeReal, a VR porn site, has explained it on Reddit. They're under attack too:

"I will be perfectly blunt and honest with the community about what is happening: One major credit card in particular is cracking down hard across the globe on various "high risk" industries. I'm sure most users on this sub are already familiar with Japanese megasite R18. Well they got cut off from this credit card because too many Japanese videos break the rules. They lost half their international revenue overnight and a chunk of their domestic revenue as a result.

What are the rules? That's a great question and as soon as we know them for sure we'll tell you. But they won't tell us, either. They give some rough guidelines but they're incredibly vague and written in such a way that they basically retain the right to interpret anything how they prefer.

This is not unique to us and it effects other companies that produce and / or distribute content as well, but the enforcement is just as patchy as the rules. We can post a video that feels edgy and taboo one day, and then the next day we receive an e-mail from someone outside the company needing an explanation about the bottle of wine on the table in one of the scenes. A scene not only needs to be completely legal, it needs to look completely legal. OnlyFans, a site invented for sexy people to build a community of content followers, briefly just said "fuck it" to porn as a whole. Even YouTube is tightening down rules on all kinds of content and demonetizing channels across the board in categories like gambling and talking about drug use. Even educational material.

This is one of those hazards that's hard to avoid as a multi-national company working across financial regulations and legal hurdles around the globe.

We are radically against censorship, but we are also powerless here. If it were actually a legal fight we might be able to do more, but if a credit card or payment processor doesn't want to do business with you, there's little you can do.

Pornhub was publicly slashed to ribbons in the media for uploads that we all know they did everything in their power to stop. The same just happened to R18. These are some of the largest sites in the world, and SLR is the largest VR porn site. When the pressure came down for us (as I can almost promise it will come for all adult sites) SLR could have made sweeping, fast fixes. And at first we did by rapidly deactivating anything even remotely controversial, and then we started watching them - individually tagging problem frames, timestaps, and videos. We go through our content and the content of EVERY studio that uploads. By the way - did you know we're hiring? We could use the help. :-D

We sincerely hope this is only a speed bump because we're staunchly against censorship, but we don't just want to tell the community why we've had to make new restrictions, we want to get the message out to other content creators: now is the time to be cautious and careful. The morality police already knocked on Pornhub's door, R18's door, and our door. Those are some of the biggest houses in the neighborhood, sure, but there are a lot of houses to go and they've got plenty of time to get to them."

John Gotti used to rail against drugs in the media while his own crew was slinging heroin.

Just a little ironic that CC companies, who have been routinely fined and censured for predatory practices as well as questionable/overly aggressive collection methods, have the gall to take a position here.

I guess said CC company finds that it is more important for them to dictate the content of vendors who PAY TO USE THEIR SERVICES, rather than focusing on maximizing profits for shareholders. Not the first time executives use their own personal bullshit to take a stand by sacrificing company revenue "for the greater good".
 

Hamger

Member
Apr 25, 2012
72
78
I believe the same thing happen to xcream site but they resolved it. They told me I can only purchase on the English site and no longer from the Japanese site. I believe the porn industry will move to crypto. Easiest way to go over this issue. I hope they all have bitcoin and other crypto as an alternative.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AceRothstein

Electromog

Akiba Citizen
Dec 7, 2009
4,453
2,715
As long as crypto values fluctuate as much as they do now, they're not a very good alternative. We need an option that is somehow tied to other currency so it's value is relatively stable. Or even better, CC companies should grow up and stop pretending nudity is a bad thing that must be banned.
 
  • Like
Reactions: EndyzWayz

Porni

Well-Known Member
Feb 29, 2012
346
321
Several hundred million people are under sanctions at all and Visa and MasterCard are not available to them - that's stability
 

AceRothstein

Active Member
Jul 13, 2019
177
229
It is logical that where Visa and MasterCard do not work, JCB does not work either.
You could be right, but JCB is a separate card with AMEX relationships that issues/processes separately.

On DMM points purchase page, JCB and VISA listed separately from AMEX and Diners' Club, amusingly enough. I didn't know DC still existed.

I believe they still accept AMEX for points purchases at this point as well.

R18 still in limbo though :(
 

Hamger

Member
Apr 25, 2012
72
78
r18 just updated there system notice saying "At this moment we cannot process credit cards and the points purchase has been disabled due to our administrative reasons. We are working toward resolving credit card processing issues." Not sure if this was updated a while ago but I know for a fact It did not say that when they first put it up
 

Kurbster

Member
Jun 14, 2007
51
3
CC companies should grow up and stop pretending nudity is a bad thing that must be banned.
This is part of an agenda. Read up on Blackrock and ESG scores. This ain't going to stop until they're bloodied hard enough into going neutral again. Free-market alternative services aren't going to be the silver bullet that everyone hopes it will be because this puritan bullshit is happening all the way at the top, especially where the trillions upon trillions of investment dollars are being divvied out
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: hoochimama

vancofan

Active Member
Jul 2, 2009
103
103
As long as crypto values fluctuate as much as they do now, they're not a very good alternative. We need an option that is somehow tied to other currency so it's value is relatively stable. Or even better, CC companies should grow up and stop pretending nudity is a bad thing that must be banned.
Crossing international boundaries also complicates things. Inside a country, electronic bank transfers are a direct account-to-account cash option. E-Interac in Canada, for example, just has a nominal flat fee instead of the % that CC charge, but both the sender and recipient need Canadian bank accounts for that to work.
 

hoochimama

Active Member
Jul 4, 2010
149
61
"This service is not available in your region .

Sorry! This content is not available in your region"
I can't even simply browse the JAV catalog anymore.
 

Electromog

Akiba Citizen
Dec 7, 2009
4,453
2,715
通常版 is the actual DVD like you might find in a shop, DOD is disc on demand where they burn the movie to a DVD-R disc.

Should be the same movie (though sometimes without a menu or additional features like trailers) but since it's a DVD-R, some standalone DVD players might not like the disc.
 

abadguy87

Member
Mar 8, 2015
78
32
通常版 is the actual DVD like you might find in a shop, DOD is disc on demand where they burn the movie to a DVD-R disc.

Should be the same movie (though sometimes without a menu or additional features like trailers) but since it's a DVD-R, some standalone DVD players might not like the disc.

so DOD is just the movie without any extra etc. that a DVD may have? or is it the exact iso with the same menu structure?
 
  • Like
Reactions: semiramis