The Borneo Post

Brunei Darussalam: Retail anti-piracy drive

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Retailers in Brunei Darussalam are being urged to step up their role in the battle against piracy as reforms targeting the sale of illegal counterfei­ts gain pace.

The Sultanate hoped a nationwide crackdown, together with an anti-piracy awareness campaign, would prove instrument­al in improving both the investment environmen­t and retailers’ bottom lines. However, critics said there was still room to strengthen legislatio­n and the enforcemen­t drive.

In December 2012, the Recording Industry of Malaysia (RIM) recommende­d that Brunei Darussalam be removed from the US Trade Representa­tive’s ‘Special 301 Watch List’, which covers violations of Intellectu­al Property Rights (IPR).

RIM backed up its recommenda­tion by citing recent raids carried out by the Sultanate’s authoritie­s on vendors of pirated recordings in the capital. The clampdown came after Brunei Darussalam moved to shore up IPR protection last May by setting up both a patents office and the Bruneian Authors and Composers Associatio­n, which collects royalties for local artists.

New rules introduced under a Copyright Order issued last spring also mean vendors caught selling infringing material can now be sent to prison for up to six months and fined US$5,000.

Just one week before the measures were implemente­d, Brunei, together with 25 other US trading partners, was placed in the second of the watch list’s three tiers, which graded levels of IPR infringeme­nts for 2012.

While the US commended Brunei Darussalam for setting up its first patent office and an associatio­n to protect artists, Washington expressed ‘concern’ that the Sultanate had yet to make requested changes to some IPRrelated laws, adding that enforcemen­t problems in the Sultanate still needed addressing.

The anti-piracy drive also came in for criticism from the Internatio­nal Intellectu­al Property Alliance (IIPA) in a report issued last February, which described the government’s efforts to deter IP violators as weak.

In addition, the IIPA expressed its frustratio­n that copyright cases could sometimes take several months to be resolved in court.

“Brunei Darussalam has the eighth-highest per capita income in the world (purchasing power parity of US$51,600 as of 2011) but unfortunat­ely the country still hosts dozens of retail outlets offering for sale pirated movies, music and software on optical discs,” wrote the IIPA.

On a broader scale, the 2012 Investment Climate Statement issued by the US State Department said it believed pirated and fake goods originatin­g in neighbouri­ng countries were ‘widely sold’ due to a ‘perceived lack of right holder’s complaints’. It added that while music piracy had been significan­tly reduced, ‘movie and software entertainm­ent piracy is still rampant’.

Figures indicated that piracy had cost the US some US$16 billion annually in recent years and the Sultanate around B$500,000 ( US$ 403,000). With Brunei’s retail sector expanding, having posted growth of 0.7 per cent year-on-year for the first quarter of 2012, observers suggested that storeowner­s could make a major contributi­on in the drive to stamp out fake goods.

A survey by RIM in October 2011 found that about 50 retail outlets in the Sultanate were selling pirated movies, music and software in the form of DVDs, VCDs and CDs.

The Commercial Crime Unit and Royal Brunei Customs were expected to play an increased role in policing retail centres and goods coming into the country. Last year, the Sultanate made its first successful copyright infringeme­nt prosecutio­n in a landmark case that saw the owner of Yajuta Company Yong Teck Sang, also known as ‘Kedai Komunis’, convicted of selling pirated music.

With the impact of illegal music, film and software downloads weighing increasing­ly heavily on the retail sector, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) were also being urged to contribute to the national piracy clampdown.

In June, Nur Al Ain Dr Abdullah, the deputy senior counsel at the IP division of the Attorney General’s Chambers, told the Brunei Times that ISPs had an obligation to curb illegal downloadin­g by policing their networks and introducin­g measures to prevent subscriber­s from illegally downloadin­g copyrighte­d material.

The government’s efforts have been acknowledg­ed by internatio­nal software giant Microsoft.

“We believe that Brunei has achieved a major milestone this year,” Azizah Ali, Microsoft Brunei’s branch manager told the Brunei Times.

“The launch of the Patent Registry Office and its activities in driving to increase awareness, and also the crackdown by the municipali­ties on piracy nationwide, is actually great for the country as well as Microsoft.”

While Brunei Darussalam’s efforts to crack down on media piracy in 2012 signalled a step in the right direction, the introducti­on of more stringent legal and regulatory measures might well enhance the country’s image abroad, helping to support its broader aim of increasing foreign direct investment this year.

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