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BEIJING, Feb. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- Most urban Chinese
know piracy is illegal but few feel guilty about buying pirated products, a
recent survey by Nanjing University shows.
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| Imported CDs, VCDs and DVDs are sold at
discounts in Chuangxin Bookstore in Haikou, capital city of South China's
Hainan Province, a bid to curb pirate publications. [newsphoto]
| The survey, supported by the China National Social
Science Foundation, involved 552 urban residents in Nanjing, capital of East
China's Jiangsu Province.
About 89.6 percent of those surveyed said piracy was
illegal but did not feel guilty about buying pirated products.
The majority of people agreed that pirates could
jeopardize the publishing industry and more than 90 percent said it was
necessary to strike unauthorized publications.
However, 31.3 percent of those polled said piracy
could never be stopped because of the special situation in China. About 7.8
percent strongly agreed on this point.
The survey also shows that most people are unable to
tell pirated publications from genuine articles.
Of those polled, 62 percent said they did not know
how to distinguish illegal products from genuine copies and 20 percent said
there was no difference between the two.
The survey showed most Chinese had mixed attitudes
towards piracy, said Zhang Zhiqiang, chief with the Publishing Science Institute
of Nanjing University.
The publishing industry and relevant government
departments should implement measures to encourage people to boycott pirated
products, Zhang said. Enditem |