New rule takes effect to curb Internet IPR breaches

By Wu Jiao (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-12-09 10:09

A revised judiciary rule from the Supreme People's Court, which came into effect on Friday, bans reprinting Internet material without obtaining preliminary approval from the copyright holder.

Under the previous judiciary rule implemented in 2003, websites that copied and re-posted Internet material did not infringe upon intellectual property right (IPR) laws so long as they identified the source of the material and paid IPR fees afterwards.

Related readings:
 China cracks down on piracy
 Watchdog brushes aside KTV threats China has nearly 20 million Internet bloggers
 
China,US to further cooperate on IPR issues

"The revision is in line with international norms in the field. It is also compatible with a new Internet information communication regulation issued by the State Council and implemented this July," said Jiang Zhipei, president of the IPR Court at the Supreme People's Court. He added that the new regulation would likely lead to more IPR legal disputes.

Now, anyone uploading text, sound and video recordings to the Internet for downloading, copying or other use, must acquire the permission of the copyright owner and pay the required fee.
12  

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)