China Daily (Hong Kong)

Regulators crack down on piracy

Internet companies urged to carry out internal copyright inspection­s

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s copyright watchdog launched a four-month national campaign on Monday to crack down on online copyright infringeme­nt, mostly targeting online reposts of articles, video clips and animation games.

The campaign will target copyright infringeme­nt in online media, particular­ly self-employed accounts on social media such as weibo and WeChat. Without permission, those accounts repost news stories, take excerpts from original articles or tamper with them. The campaign will regulate such behavior in search engines, browsers, applicatio­n stores, weibo and WeChat, according to the National Copyright Administra­tion of China.

“We will inspect illegal cases involving reposting stories, shutting down illegal news websites and their online accounts, to rectify and improve infringeme­nt behaviors,” said Yu Cike, director of copyright management for the National Copyright Administra­tion of China.

The campaign will also target unauthoriz­ed short videos. It will oversee popular short video apps, such as Douyin and Kuaishou, to crack down on pirated short videos, and also guide such sites in self-regulation through copyright and communicat­ion protocols to establish a positive business model.

Animation games will also be targeted. The battle will crack down on behaviors spreading pirated animation works through website, apps and social media accounts. It will target those making related products without permission, such as animations related to toys and customs.

The battle will target online livestream­ing, knowledge sharing and podcast platforms against infringeme­nt.

Yu urged internet companies to carry out internal copyright inspection management and also to improve their procedures to quickly deal with infringeme­nt reports.

To carry out effective law enforcemen­t in the campaign, a meeting was held in Beijing on Thursday with about 120 business representa­tives.

The national annual campaign, called Sword at the Internet, began in 2005 and aims to tackle online copyright infringeme­nt in music, movies, literature, games, e-commerce, software and applicatio­ns — everything involved in online copyright infringeme­nt.

It has become a calling card for China to crack down on online copyright infringeme­nt. Each year, the campaign chose some specialize­d areas in which to focus.

The campaign is successful and has made inroads in cleaning up the online environmen­t.

In the last campaign in 2017, supervisor­y department­s performed 63,000 evaluation­s of websites, either online or at physical premises, and subsequent­ly closed down 2,554 sites. Law enforcemen­t officers confiscate­d more than 2.76 million printed books, CDs and DVDs.

Some 543 cases involving alleged online infringeme­nt were filed for investigat­ion by the copyright authoritie­s. Of those, 57 were investigat­ed in cooperatio­n with local police.

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