US, China Working On Intellectual Property Rights
itwbennett writes "US Attorney General Eric Holder is visiting Beijing this week to discuss how China and the US can better coordinate efforts to stop intellectual property rights violations. 'One of the things that has happened in recent years is that counterfeiting has become a globalized industry,' said Christian Murck, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. To effectively shut down these operations, cross-country efforts at strengthening global enforcement like Holder's visit to China are crucial, he added. Coinciding with Holder's visit, China announced it will launch a new national campaign to crack down on intellectual property rights violations. The campaign will take aim at the production and distribution of pirated goods such as DVDs and software products. Violations relating to registered trademarks and patents will also be targeted. The campaign will last for half a year. The commercial value of pirated software in China, at $7.5 billion, is second only to that in the US, where it is $8.3 billion, according to the Business Software Alliance and IDC."
Coincidental timing after China's latest strangling of rare earths, yes?
The campaign will last for half a year. The commercial value of pirated software in China, at $7.5 billion, is second only to that in the U.S., where it is $8.3 billion, according to the Business Software Alliance and IDC.
[citation needed]
Aside from paying lip service and just carrying on as usual, what's in this for China? I see no reason they should suddenly start giving a hoot about American IP. They only stand to gain from copying industrial designs, software, and so on.
Sorry was my first...
Anyhow, as commentary, I doubt this will go much of anywhere... much like you can find pirated DVDs sold by crackheads in the NYC subway... trying to dissuade or even outright prevent IP theft, etc. from occurring in a place like China is absurd.
As I've found out in government, rules, laws and otherwise are there to make certain people feel better but rarely do they help or actually enforced universally and without bias. Sorry... just feeling a little malaise at this point.
Now these numbers are certainly reliable; they come from the BS Alliance!
As opposed discussing how to coordinate efforts to stop human rights violations.
Here's hoping the U.S. is held accountable for knowingly encouraging human rights violations once China starts "cracking down" as they put it.
Prepare for a lawsuit by Anonymous Coward for violating his IP for first posts.
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
Why are we continually bending over backward in attempt to reign in the country of China? My conspiracy theory is this:
1) US and China agree to create new laws criminalizing previously legal behavior.
2) US helps China build 1000 new prisons over the next 10 years.
3) China fills prisons, this extending their slave labor force.
4) US and Chinese CEOs and government officials PROFIT!!!
And yes folks, I just solved the Underpants meme.
Here's a way to make sure it gets enforced:
Any attempt to sell counterfeit goods in another country, shuts down trade with the offending country and gives the copyright owning country the right to sink that country's trade vessels.
Bet that would step up enforcement in a hurry.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
WTF!? First post getting modded up? The world is coming to its end ...
Instead of displaying the messages, I'm only seeing Subjects/titles. I didn't change anything on my end (still set at classic index; low bandwidth).
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
China is playing the west for a bunch of chumps.
So by logic then, I think the release of the new Battleship film should lend itself to an interesting scenario....
Chinese (but Nigerian 409 flagged) cargo vessel carrying pirated copies of the Battleship movie, filmed in VHS-C and upscaled on an iMac knockoff with a pirated copy of iMovie in the nearest combination opium-den multiplex, gets sunk by a U.S. Cruiser outside of the Port of Los Angeles... damn, you sunk my Battleships?!
Just sayin'
(8.3 billion) / (658.99) is less than 13 million. Photoshop has to have been pirated more than 13 million times.
Just replace the FBI warning at the beginning with the message, "this movie brought to you by the Dalai Lama".
Then sit back and watch the Chinese government crack down on pirated DVDs with a vengeance...
Eh. I disagree.
If China chose to crackdown on illegal DVD sellers, they could do it just as effectively as the US did it (DMCA makes it illegal), but with the additional punishment of serving hard time in the Chinese version of the Gulag.
China simply doesn't want to. They are like the US in the 1800s, with very little protection for foreign authors.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
I don't believe for a second any agreement China comes to agree upon would be honored. They haven't respected the intellectual property of ANY foreign country for decades, and I don't think a stern talking-to from the 'richest' and 'most powerful' country in the world is going to help.
If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
Another chance for China to tell us "FU" (by telling us that they're going to do something about this and not) and another chance for us to bend over and take it!
On the other hand, seeing how draconian stuff is getting with ACTA, maybe that's a good thing.
That is all.
Oh man, this is the funniest thing I have read on /. all year.
China and "rights"? puh-leeze
Beijing has been ass-deep in American IP lawyers for years.
"The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
Agree - China's interest is in selling to the US - they have little or no concern whatsoever about goods received from the west, especially those as industrially useless as entertainment (except if it violates state dogma, of course). These talks are utterly meaningless.
Deja Moo: The distinct feeling that you've heard this bull before.
Human rights take a back seat to copyrights.
All citizens are criminals until proven wealthy.
Foo Kyu?
I figure if you do some hollywood accounting of the theft of american intellectual property a case could be made in the icj that china loses its right to claim the debt the USA owes to it as payment. Further infractions leading to more cost.
To this day, they are ruled by the authoritative CCP regime. [But] the people have more freedoms than they did 20 years ago
So I take it that China under the CCP is better than CCCP that tried communism first. But is it better than the CCP that runs Eve Online?
I wasn't aware that the US had a binary choice, in which it could either:
Remember last November, and the discussions in May?
Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
And by Tim Berners-Lee and George Lucas for his username...
So, if someone in the USA makes counterfeit jeans for example (or software, or etc.) and sells it to someone in Iran, the country of Iran can sink our trade vessels? OH you meant only the USA can do those things...I see.
Not even humorous, just blind, narcissistic flag waving.
Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
Easy solution. "Do what we want or we will default on our 10 trillion dollar debt and collapse your economy too." Financial nuclear war.
The whole of western civilisation and law has allways been on the premise property has more rights than people. After all theres no alue attached to people.
I hope the US has to make concessions to China on IP. I wish China would lead a push for a less restrictive IP regime, particularly for patents and copyrights. They're really the only country with the clout to oppose what the US has been doing.
Did you eat a lot of lead paint as a child?
We all know how reliable the Business Software Alliance and IDC's piracy figures are... in fact, according to The Economist they're totally BS. So why would China even believe its an issue to the point where they'll agree to IP agreements that are nothing more than protectionists movements by companies to make more money? Or is it lawyers trying to prove their worth in a company making an issue out of something they really have absolutely no control over? Can you really stop companies from underlicensing products by scaring them into going legit through government laws?
When I see this, I roll my eyes and keep on thinking what total BS all these laws really are. I mean, if I make a copy Windows 2008 SP2, I could go to jail for 5 years with a $250,000 fine. If I kill my neighbour with a crowbar in a fight, I could get a year or two sentence in jail. Is it me, or is something not quite right about this?
Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things. - Peter F. Drucker
Actually, no, I'm perfectly fine with Iran sinking our trade vessels in their waters if they're carrying counterfeit goods.
Thus putting back to work the 23% of Americans currently unemployed, all in searching cargo containers for counterfeit goods before they leave the country.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.