A Beijing court has found a Chinese company and its retail shop
guilty of violating the copyright of five US film companies.
The Beijing Second Intermediate People's Court on Monday ordered
the Beijing Shiji Haihong Commerce and Trade Company and one of its
retail shops to pay 164,000 yuan (US$20,500) in damages to five
Hollywood studios including Twentieth Century Fox, Walt Disney,
Paramount Pictures, Universal City Studios and Columbia
Pictures.
The film studios teamed up to file 16 suits against the
defendant for selling pirated DVDs of 16 movies including successes
such as The 40 Year-Old Virgin, Mr and Mrs Smith and
The Incredibles without copyright authorization, seeking
over 500,000 yuan (US$62,500) in compensation.
The two defendants failed to appear at Monday's court hearing
despite the summons, according to the court, and were thus tried in
absentia.
The court ruled that the film studios hold the copyright of the
16 movies and are protected by Chinese law. The defendants both
sold DVDs in direct infringement of copyright and without providing
legal sources for the DVDs.
China agreed with the Motion Picture Association of America and
pledged to increase anti-piracy efforts on the internet last
Friday.
A Memorandum of Understanding on the Establishment of a
Coordination Mechanism for Online Copyright Protection was
signed by the National Copyright Administration of China (NCA) and
the Motion Picture Association, Business Software Alliance,
Association of American Publishers and Britain-based The Publishers
Association.
According to the memo, all sides will strengthen and improve
copyright authorization authenticity, and communicate on cracking
down on transnational online piracy and copyright infringement on a
regular basis.
The American and British sides will provide lists of their
member companies to the NCA to ramp up protection on their movies,
software, video and audio products and written works.
Last week, China also launched a new campaign against producers
and warehouses of pirated movies, books, and software.
(Xinhua News Agency December 19, 2006)