What's new

Russia, China, India Among Worst Piracy Offenders, U.S. Trade Report Claims

ZABASHO

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Feb 17, 2012
Messages
451
Reaction score
0
Russia, China and India are hotbeds of piracy, and their disregard for copyright laws has landed them on the U.S. Trade Representative's annual list of the biggest intellectual-property offenders.

Also joining them as the worst of the bunch are Israel, Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Indonesia, Pakistan, Thailand, Ukraine and Venezuela.

The survey argues that the problem of piracy is intensifying as the growth of broadband technology makes it easier for people across the globe to download and transmit movies, television shows and other copyrighted forms of entertainment.

To that end, the report said that online sales of counterfeit goods soon will surpass those by street vendors who offer pirated discs or products.

Also read: Chris Dodd at CinemaCon: Hollywood, Silicon Valley Must Work Together on Piracy

Beyond public embarrassment, the report has little practical impact. There are no sanctions or punishments attached to its findings. Rather the hope is that the governments in the various counties branded as offenders will strengthen their copyright laws.

The report examined 77 trading partners and found that 40 countries needed to have their piracy enforcement monitored.

“This year’s Special 301 Report is more significant than ever in light of recent U.S. Government data showing that [intellectual property] intensive industries support as many as 40 million American jobs and up to 60 percent of U.S. exports,” U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said in a statement. "When trading partners don’t protect [intellectual property rights], they threaten those critical jobs and exports."

Kirk did note that some of those countries that had been highlighted in last year's report for being negligent had been removed from the list. In particular, Spain and Malaysia were cited for creating new laws that cracked down on online piracy.

Even some of the countries that found themselves publicly shamed for a lax approach to enforcement received measured praise. Russia was lauded for creating an intellectual property rights court that will be operational in 2013, and China was commended for making political officials more accountable for their enforcement of copyright rules.

The Motion Picture Association of America, which failed in its recent efforts to see stricter laws in the United States passed that would punish foreign sites that trade pirated materials, praised the report.

“This report highlights content theft and barriers in foreign markets that pose threats to the continued growth of U.S. creative industries and the U.S. economy," MPAA Chairman and CEO Chris Dodd said in a statement. "Strong copyright protection and enforcement are vital to our industry’s ability to create U.S. jobs, grow our own economy, and expand U.S. exports.”

It is not clear that the U.S. government has any appetite for any new legislation to help with that effort given the bruising debate that killed the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA) and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), both of which contained provisions dealing with foreign websites that distribute illegal copies of films or TV shows. Just a few months ago, technology companies like Google and Facebook rallied popular support to their side by claiming that the legislation infringed upon free speech rights.

In a meeting with press last week in Las Vegas at the theatrical exhibition trade show CinemaCon, Dodd acknowledged that SOPA and PIPA were "dead" and said that he now hoped that Hollywood and Silicon Valley could find a solution that would not need to be "memorialized" in law.

"We have the gift of time," Dodd said. "We can get people to start thinking about this without all the clamoring that was going on before."

Russia, China, India Among Worst Piracy Offenders, U.S. Trade Report Claims - MSN Entertainment News
 
.
Russia, China and India
Israel, Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Indonesia, Pakistan, Thailand, Ukraine and Venezuela.

Almost every country except US is supporting piracy
 
.
Russia, China and India
Israel, Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Indonesia, Pakistan, Thailand, Ukraine and Venezuela.

Almost every country except US is supporting piracy

yea, but thats not exactly a good thing, nor something to be proud of.

IDK about others but India should do more to enforce laws protecting IP rights.
 
.
the problem is not that simple as it seems from the outset...

while calculating the losses they just multiply the downloads with the original price of the content which is patently wrong.
The production companies already price their product keeping in mind a potential level of piracy. Also, suppose a particular Korean show is never gonna be broadcasted in India and neither it's available in market soon.. Is he wrong in downloading and watching it ?

Also due to easy availability of pirated stuffs.. people watch many movies which any sane person wouldn't even bother to watch in first place.

case in point.. akshay kumar movies..
 
.
Well i have to agree....But I do not think any Indian or Indian website works as a content provider...its Germans ,American, Russians and many mixed parties from Romania,Amsterdam Switzerland etc etc that actually rip the DRM of off most copyright products and host it up on there websites.

China,India are just making the most out of Free content thats readily available on the web.IMHO.
 
.
Well i have to agree....But I do not think any Indian or Indian website works as a content provider...its Germans ,American, Russians and many mixed parties from Romania,Amsterdam Switzerland etc etc that actually rip the DRM of off most copyright products and host it up on there websites.

China,India are just making the most out of Free content thats readily available on the web.IMHO.

most of the rip offs come from Russia, Netherlands and some other European countries, and the content is mainly hosted on european servers, but recently there has been an increase in Indian sites hosting such content also, or the european entities registering and operating on .IN domains. The condition on chinese servers is equally bad or much worse off.

But main point is as you state. China and India are making the most out of free content that is illegally and readily available across the web.
 
.
Like America isn't a big piracy country?

Every student I know here watches pirated movies. Every one of them. Nobody has the slightest moral compunction about it.
 
.
Its true that Piracy is rampant in India. However, there's a reason for this rampant piracy.

How many Indians do you suppose would like to pay upwards of 1000 - 5000 Rs. just in order to use word, excel, etc.?

How many Indians would like to BUY photoshop at its current price?

The prices that American companies set are reasonable for people in the USA (I do not say that they do not indulge in Piracy). However, they are too over the head for Indians, Chinese, or even Pakistanis.
 
.
f**k the US, f**k US IP.
china should protect domestic IP and ignore US IP.

we should copy, steal and ripoff every american thing possible.
IP is a way to deny others technology advancement.
the whites want to rule the world for another 500 years.

To some extent the owner/originator does deserve an appreciation for his efforts but the current condition just stifle a level playing field for asian and western countries.

case in point, basmati was grown in indus valley for last several thousand years and those US faggots were trying to have a copyright over it.. can u believe it ? America was discovered like few hundred years ago and they have the audacity to do that ?
Cases like those make u stand up and show middle finger to those people.
 
. . .
That's the greatness of Internet Age! Anything out there is game.

If someone doesn't want his product to be stolen, he either don't make it or protect it at all cost. Times are different than the old days and he should adapt accordingly rather than blame the world.

For good or for bad, the reality is no one can stop the freedom of The Internet.
 
.
Its true that Piracy is rampant in India. However, there's a reason for this rampant piracy.

How many Indians do you suppose would like to pay upwards of 1000 - 5000 Rs. just in order to use word, excel, etc.?

How many Indians would like to BUY photoshop at its current price?

The prices that American companies set are reasonable for people in the USA (I do not say that they do not indulge in Piracy). However, they are too over the head for Indians, Chinese, or even Pakistanis.

Quite Agree with it! Only issue I see in that is people, and even companies, who can afford are doing the same. Very few small companies use the 5-20% licensed versions and rest the pirated ones.
 
. .

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom