China Daily (Hong Kong)

Smartening up China’s image

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The Palace Museum announced on Friday that it will stop selling its popular “Gege” dolls, based on a Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) princess, after they were said to be too similar to a product made by a foreign manufactur­er, especially in terms of their head-body proportion and joints, which led to allegation­s they were the products of intellectu­al property rights theft.

In fact, the head and clothing of these dolls were originally designed by the museum’s Taobao designers, but their body design was with the authorizat­ion of a cooperativ­e partner. This means whether or not the dolls involved an IPR infringeme­nt has yet to be confirmed.

In the meantime, the swift removal of these dolls from the shelves by the Palace Museum store deserves praise. The store’s rapid response to the claims shows its respect for the IPR of other brands.

Without full self-innovation, any products, no matter how good they look, will lack market confidence and courage. The embarrassm­ent of the Palace Museum has also been experience­d by some domestic cellphone manufactur­ers, many of whom were found to be imitating the exterior appearance of Samsung and Apple products.

At a time when the country is making all-out efforts to implement the Made in China 2025 strategy of applying smart technologi­es to upgrade manufactur­ing and achieve innovation-driven developmen­t, China should increase its efforts to achieve its own distinctiv­e products and brands by increasing its input into R&D and offering multifacet­ed support to innovative enterprise­s.

It is hoped the Palace Museum’s cute Gege dolls will be on sale again soon with a new design that is clearly its own.

Chinese products must have their own core technologi­es and designs in the future.

— WORKER’S DAILY

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