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The bookstore shutterbugs, who are referred to as paishuzu in Chinese, are mainly students looking for information from reference books.(File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, March 12 -- Several bookstore owners in Shanghai are unhappy about an
increase in the number of people taking photos of pages in expensive books so
they don't have to pay for them.
But the shop owners have done little, if anything, to
solve the problem themselves. It is common to see people reading in bookstores
for hours at time without being asked to buy something or leave, and store
owners have taken the same laissez-faire attitude to photography.
The bookstore shutterbugs, who are referred to as
paishuzu in Chinese, are mainly students looking for information from reference
books.
"Such books are usually expensive, often costing
thousands of yuan for one copy. That's too much for a student," said a young man
surnamed He in Shanghai Book City. "We do this because it won't make sense to
buy the whole book as we only want the content from some of the pages."
Store owners said the practice hurts their interests.
"A more important problem than financial interests is
that they infringe the copyright of those book actually," said Jiang Li of
Shanghai Book City.
"We have put a sign on the wall telling people not to
do it."
(Source: Shanghai Daily)