Version: 2008

September 18, 2005 6:00 AM PDT

The copyright challenge in China

Signs of China embracing global market rules abound, from Beijing's decision to loosen its currency's peg to the dollar to the willingness of Chinese companies to pursue acquisitions abroad.

But one thing never seems to change, and it's as obvious on street corners today as it was six years ago. In 1999, when "Star Wars Episode 1--The Phantom Menace" debuted, it was quickly pirated on DVDs that sold throughout China for next to nothing.

Fast forward to May 2005--four years after China joined the World Trade Organization and embraced its stringent rules on intellectual property rights. When "Star Wars: Episode III--Revenge of the Sith" opened in U.S. theaters, copies again hit the streets of Beijing within days. Sold out of bicycle baskets by roving vendors, available in mom-and-pop retail stores everywhere, the counterfeit DVDs retailed for about 75 cents each.

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For movie executives, those DVDs drove home the fact that their ongoing fight against counterfeiters has basically made no headway. Frustrated, Motion Picture Association of America president Dan Glickman recently raised the prospect of a push for action at the World Trade Organization.

Indeed, the MPAA is part of a Washington, D.C.-based coalition of copyright companies now working with the U.S. Trade Representative to study the possibility of taking China before the WTO to compel a genuine crackdown. Given the tough sanctions provided by the WTO's Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights agreement, such a move would have major diplomatic implications--at a time when the U.S. urgently needs Chinese help on North Korea and other issues.

The new, harder line says much about the level of exasperation among foreign companies in China. They can't afford to stay out of such a large and potentially lucrative market. They're well aware they face IP theft there. But the extent of piracy--which continues to escalate, according to a 2004 white paper by the American Chamber of Commerce in China--still catches many off guard.

The problem affects virtually every industry, from films to software to drugs to auto parts. What's more, as China's exports have surged in recent years, so have counterfeit exports. About two-thirds of pirated goods seized by U.S. Customs come from China. Though it's difficult to place a value on financial losses, the U.S. Trade Representative estimates that counterfeiting worldwide costs American companies around $200 billion to $250 billion per year, with China likely responsible for the majority of those losses.

What's standing in the way of better intellectual property rights enforcement? "It's not a plot," says Bruce Lehman, former commissioner of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the chairman of the International Intellectual Property Institute. "It's the result of a system in transition."

Lehman, who's also senior counsel at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer and Feld, points out the contradictions: On the one hand, senior officials are earnestly discussing business-method patents. On the other, there are events such as the decision last year by the State Intellectual Property Office to invalidate Pfizer's 2001 patent on Viagra after Chinese drugmakers had challenged it. "That was kind of mysterious," says Lehman.

"The arguments we hear from the Chinese side are, 'Please lower the prices and then we won't pirate.'"
--Thomas Pattloch, attorney, Schulz, Noack and Barwinkel

There isn't a shortage of laws, or of high-level promises. The latest: In a visit to China in July, U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez won a pledge from government officials to increase criminal prosecutions in cases of IP theft. But while the laws on the books in Beijing exceed WTO obligations, local authorities in this sprawling country usually lack the resources and motivation to enforce them.

"China is very fragmented, so even if there was a lot of political will behind this, you would see local protectionism get in the way," says Clement Ngai, legal counsel in Asia-Pacific for software maker Autodesk.

The enforcement organizations are a bewildering hodgepodge of agencies and their divisions, some with overlapping authority. Among those involved are the Administrations for Industry and Commerce, with its Trademark Division and Economic Supervision Division; the Technical Supervision Bureau; Copyright Administration offices; the customs authorities; and the Public

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For those who care about American IT and our national security
by 207796398873175208235380528963 September 18, 2005 11:30 AM PDT
This is a MUST reading for those who care about the future of American IT and our national security: http://www.alexanderbell.us/Initiative/IT.htm
Reply to this comment
don't be arrogant!
by September 18, 2005 10:41 PM PDT
Piracy is a serious thing in China. But let's think of other aspects of the story: 1. the prices of software, including microsoft windows, office, are higher than these in the US. But the income of chinese is only 1/10 of that of american. is it fair to chinese customers? 2. you promote this issue to National Safety. Is it really relate to the safety of american? I just discover the arrogance, as usual, from the article. actually, piracy is a matter of business violation. Chinese software companies suffered more than american companies because they are of small size and can't bear the loss due to piracy. like movie piracy, if all americans behave well, how can the pirater get the origin of the movie to mass copy them?
3. without any evidence and generate the conclusion that 90% of chinese are using pirated software! the comment itself shows incredulity of the article.
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"What goes around, comes around."
by September 19, 2005 8:53 AM PDT
It won't be too long before China and other "patent pirates" start developing their own breakthrough inventions, processes, and technologies. Then they will desperately want protection worldwide for THEIR OWN innovations.
They need to be firmly reminded about the "...comes around" adage..and inevitability. INNOV8R
Reply to this comment
"What goes around, comes around."
by September 19, 2005 8:53 AM PDT
It won't be too long before China and other "patent pirates" start developing their own breakthrough inventions, processes, and technologies. Then they will desperately want protection worldwide for THEIR OWN innovations.
They need to be firmly reminded about the "...comes around" adage..and inevitability. INNOV8R
Reply to this comment
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