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BEIJING, May 18 -- Online copyright will be protected
in China when an administrative rule takes effect from May 30.
The regulation was jointly created by the National
Copyright Administration and the Ministry of Information Industry.
The rule applies to services including uploading, storing, connecting or searching online literary,
audio and video products in accordance with the instructions of the Internet
content provider, without any content revision.
Under the rule, when copyright owners notify the
Internet service provider (ISP) that their copyrights have been violated, the
provider should take measures to remove relevant copied content.
ISPs that know about copyright violations but don't
remove the violating content will face punishment. All income from the illegal
act will be confiscated, and a fine of up to three times the illegal income will
be assessed. If the illegal income proves difficult to calculate, the maximum
fine will be 100,000 yuan (US$12,000).
Internet services have developed at a rapid pace in
China in recent years. The country has more than 1,000 ISPs, 10,000 Internet
content providers and 100 million Internet users, according to Li Guobin, an
official of the Ministry of Information Industry.
The rule states that serious and potentially criminal
cases will be investigated by judicial departments.
"Copyright violations on the Internet have been
running rampant in the past few years, causing damage to the information
industry," Xu Chao, an official of the National Copyright Administration, said
at a news conference on Monday in Beijing.
"Though there are no specific statistics on economic
loss caused by the violations, such violations will impair relevant industries
if not curbed."
Sources from the National Copyright Administration
said that a higher-level legal regulation will be worked out within two years.
The administration is writing a draft to be submitted to the State Council for
approval late this year.
China has adopted two ways to protect intellectual
property rights - through administrative and judicial departments. Therefore,
administrative rules and legal regulations often work in parallel.
"This rule sounds good to our company and other
counterparts," Li Bing, an editor of Sohu.com, said in a telephone interview.
In recent years, many articles produced by Sohu and
published on its website have been copied by other Internet service providers.
The worst violation is that some ISPs have published
plagiarized works. Sohu, which reprinted and published those works saying it did
not know they were plagiarized, was involved in copyright disputes, Li said.
"Hopefully, the rule can better manage Internet
services," she said.
(Source: China Daily)
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