China Daily (Hong Kong)

This Day, That Year

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July 30, 1992 marked China’s agreement to join the Universal Copyright Convention. It formally joined in October that year.

Solid progress has been made in recent decades as the country has taken a firm stance on protecting copyrights and has cracked down on various forms of infringeme­nt, including piracy.

A photo published on June

This year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up policy.

2, 1998, in China Daily showed law-enforcemen­t officials in Fengxian county, Jiangsu province, explaining copyright to local residents.

Several administra­tive laws and regulation­s devoted to copyright protection were enacted in the early 1990s. These include the Copyright Law of the People’s Republic of China and the Rules for the Implementa­tion of the Copy-

The newspaper and beyond

right Law, both effective from 1991, and the Regulation on the Protection of Computer Software, which came into effect in October of that year.

In preparatio­n for China’s entry into the World Trade Organizati­on, revisions were made to all these laws and regulation­s at the start of the new millennium.

Since then, China has joined several internatio­nal convention­s to expand cooperatio­n on copyright protection.

In 1992, it joined the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. In April 1993, it was accepted as a member of the Convention for the Protection of Producers of Phonograms Against Unauthoriz­ed Duplicatio­n of Their Phonograms.

In 2014, China set up specialize­d intellectu­al property courts in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, Guangdong province. The move marked an important step forward for the country in dealing with counterfei­ting and providing greater IPR protection.

Such courts have been establishe­d in 18 cities.

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