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BEIJING, March 28 -- Intellectual property right
(IPR) violations cannot be eliminated overnight but China will speed up the
process, a top copyright official pledged yesterday in Beijing.
The government has been resolute, and made headway,
in cracking down on infringements and piracy of laser discs and software, said
Yan Xiaohong, deputy chief of the National Copyright Administration of China.
"For a developing nation like China, protecting IPRs
is a process ... We hope to shorten this process as much as possible, but it's
difficult to eliminate it overnight," he told a press conference.
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| Zhu Xiaoqing, deputy procurator-general of
the Supreme People's Procuratorate.
[Xinhua] | To ensure
serious IPR offenders face criminal penalties instead of just administrative
fines, China has made it mandatory for law-enforcers to transfer such offences
to judicial authorities "timely," Zhu Xiaoqing, deputy procurator-general of the
Supreme People's Procuratorate, said yesterday.
The combination of administrative punishment and
criminal penalties has enabled copyright law-enforcement agencies to strike hard
at infringers and pirates, Yan said.
Last year, law-enforcers transferred 18 major
Internet copyright infringement cases to judicial departments, according to Yan.
Since 1996, China has broken up 223 illegal laser
disc production lines, of which six were in this year, he said.
The government is offering rewards of up to 300,000
yuan (US$37,000) for any tip-off that leads to the exposure of an underground
production line, Yan said.
During a recent investigation of half of the
country's disc manufacturers, authorities revoked the licences of six companies
and halted production at eight more, including one in Southwest China's
Chongqing Municipality and another in Beijing.
Visiting US Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez said
in a speech at Chongqing University yesterday that widespread counterfeiting was
not only harming US companies but also posing a threat to China's own long-term
development.
Yan said that China destroyed 106 million pirated
discs and books last year alone, indicating that the country's crackdown was
effective. But at the same time, there is a serious problem with piracy, which
needs to be curbed through more forceful and effective measures.
Yan also said that by the end of last year, all
Chinese government departments were using authorized software.
The copyright agency, along with the ministries of
information industry and commerce, require computer makers to pre-install
copyrighted operating systems, and enterprises in China to use authentic
applications only.
Also speaking at yesterday's briefing, Zheng
Shaodong, a Ministry of Public Security official, said China wanted to
"strengthen co-operation with international authorities" in IPR protection.
"We hope to strike hard against international
intellectual property right infringements," Zheng said.
(Source: China Daily) |