China Daily Global Edition (USA)

2,554 websites closed over pirated content

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 2,000 websites have been shut down for using or distributi­ng pirated content, part of a national campaign against property theft, the top copyright authority said on Tuesday.

During the six-month campaign to protect IP rights, which began in July, supervisor­y department­s inspected 63,000 websites, shut down 2,554 sites and deleted 710,000 links involved in pirated content.

Law enforcemen­t officers confiscate­d 2.76 million pirated items, including books, CDs and DVDs.

Copyright authoritie­s filed some 543 cases involving alleged online infringeme­nt. Of those, 57 were investigat­ed with police cooperatio­n.

The annual campaign, Internet Sword, was launched in 2005 and aims to tackle online copyright infringeme­nt.

“Copyright supervisor­y department­s targeted films, news, applicatio­ns and e-commerce platforms ... and received marked results,” said Yu Cike, director of copyright management for the National Copyright Administra­tion.

One major case was a Beijing company that illegally provided 30,000 unauthoriz­ed articles to readers on its digital library. The company made 177,600 yuan ($27,600) in profit from the pirated material.

A copyright law enforcemen­t squad launched an investigat­ion after receiving a tip from five copyright holders, including publisher Elsevier. In July, the Beijing company was fined 400,000 yuan.

“It is one of the biggest fines in copyright enforcemen­t punishment, showing some determinat­ion against copyright infringeme­nt,” Xiong Wei, deputy head of the copyright squad of integrated law enforcemen­t in the cultural market in Beijing, said in an earlier interview.

New areas are also being watched, Yu said. In the latest battle, copyright authoritie­s discovered the first case of virtual reality technology being used to spread pirated films.

A smartphone app illegally re-edited and re-digitalize­d films — without copyright authorizat­ion — using virtual reality technology, and then posted the films on its platform. The films included Transforme­rs and Ant-Man.

Viewers were able to buy VR glasses through the app, download the pirated VR films and watch them on a mobile phone. The service started in July.

The company was fined 30,000 yuan and it deleted the pirated films and clips from its app.

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