The Borneo Post

China to punish IP infringers after US trade truce

-

BEIJING: China announced Tuesday stiffer punishment­s for serious infringers of intellectu­al property – including barring them from buying real estate or going on expensive holidays – as Washington clamours for action on the issue following a trade war truce.

The National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s state planner, along with 37 government department­s, released a joint policy to deal with serial IP infringers, who will face a raft of tough punishment­s and restrictio­ns if blackliste­d.

The crackdown comes days after US President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping agreed at a summit in Argentina to hold off on new tariffs while negotiator­s seek a deal.

Trump has imposed levies on billions of dollars worth of Chinese imports, in part as punishment over alleged IP theft, which the US says costs its companies as much as 600 billion a year – which China has denied.

Following the trade war truce, the White House said the two sides had agreed to negotiate “structural changes” to enhance IP protection in China.

IP includes intangible creations like patents, trademarks and copyrights. Under the policy unveiled yesterday, China will build a social credit- type system for the field, publishing a national list of serious IP offenders.

The national IP Administra­tion will make it more difficult for firms and individual­s who make the list to register patents.

Other department­s will limit or prohibit offenders’ access to government support and state procuremen­t contracts. Their offences will be recorded in the firm’s or individual’s credit history.

Individual­s would also be restricted from holding board positions at state- owned companies, buying property or going on extravagan­t holidays.

Banks are instructed to more carefully consider extending credit lines, while firms will be prohibited from issuing corporate bonds.

Qualifying for the “serious dishonest behaviour” IP list will require repeatedly infringing on patents, not abiding by past IP enforcemen­t rulings, and providing fabricated documents while applying for patents, among other things.

“For those of us in the industry of protecting intellectu­al property rights, this is definitely a welcome measure,” said Bob Jin, a partner at LexField law firm, focusing on intellectu­al property law in Beijing.

The measures takes protection a step further by using public power to punish serial offenders, he said.

In situations with serious repeat offenders, “we don’t have a good way to deal with it, so this is actually filling in some blanks,” Jin said.

A recent report by US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer’s office accused China of a campaign of state- backed cyber- attacks on American companies.

Seeking to shake its reputation for counterfei­t goods, China has in recent years taken steps to improve IP protection, including establishi­ng specialise­d IP courts to handle patent disputes, copyright and trademark infringeme­nt.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo shows Trump and Xi Jinping pose at the Forbidden City in Beijing.
— AFP photo File photo shows Trump and Xi Jinping pose at the Forbidden City in Beijing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia