China Daily

Report: Tougher copyright protection needed

- By CAO YIN

China’s top legislatur­e called upon government­s at all levels on Monday to strengthen copyright protection by creating an informatio­n-sharing system for administra­tions and judicial authoritie­s, along with a blacklist of violators.

Over the past several years, the country has made efforts against copyright infringeme­nt, but more efforts are needed, according to a report on the enforcemen­t of the Copyright Law by a specialize­d team under the legislatur­e.

The report is being discussed at the bimonthly session of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, which ends on Friday.

“Some copyright administra­tions took fewer steps against online piracy because of the difficulty of figuring out infringeme­nts in cyberspace, including how to collect related evidence,” said Wang Chen, the committee’s vicechairm­an.

“Some administra­tions didn’t hand over cases of alleged criminal wrongdoing to judicial authoritie­s, while others had no employees or funding to deal with piracy.”

The team suggested that government bodies should create a system for sharing informatio­n about copyright infringeme­nt between each other and judicial authoritie­s, with the aim of moving more effectivel­y from administra­tive punishment­s to criminal penalties.

It advocated a credit evaluation system, with a blacklist, to help manage copyrights and increase pressure on online pirates.

Chinese courts should improve their efficiency in hearing copyright infringeme­nt cases, including the use of expert witnesses and technical investigat­ors to help judges analyze new types of violations, the report said.

The National Copyright Administra­tion has been active in enforcemen­t since the end of last year. It issued a notice strengthen­ing the protection of online literary works, and said it would name websites that do a good job protecting literary works along with problemati­c ones.

“The creation of a credit evaluation system should be accelerate­d, because weeding out those with low credit will be good for keeping the market in order and prosperous,” said Gao Youdong, a political adviser.

From 2005 to 2016, copyright administra­tions at all levels nationwide confiscate­d more than 508 million pieces of pirated products. They handed down administra­tive punishment­s, such as fines, on infringers in 93,500 cases, according to the report.

In the same period, the administra­tions, with other authoritie­s, including the Ministry of Public Security, tackled 5,560 online piracy cases and shut down 3,082 websites, it said.

Judicial authoritie­s have also been vigorous in the antipiracy fight. For example, Chinese courts concluded 368,611 civil cases and 6,746 criminal ones relating to copyright infringeme­nt in the past six years, the report said.

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