China is to help overseas companies to gain confidence in the
country's efforts to protect intellectual property rights (IPR), as
President Hu Jintao met with Microsoft Corp founder Bill Gates
yesterday (Tuesday local time) in the first stop of his US
visit.
"The talks between President Hu and Gates are not about saying
that China in the future will not have any problems with pirated
software," Wang Ziqiang, spokesman for the State Copyright Bureau,
told a press conference yesterday.
"These talks are a signal to show the stance of the Chinese
government in protecting IPR and cracking down on IPR
violations."
Hu's meeting with Gates in Seattle was to give overseas
investors and companies confidence in China's determination to
crack down on IPR violations and to believe that piracy can be
limited to a small scale with the consistent efforts of the Chinese
government, Wang said.
China has passed regulations recently that computers
manufactured and in China must be pre-installed with legitimate
operating system and imported computers sold in China must be
pre-installed with legal operating system, as an effort to
strengthen IPR protection.
"We are right now working to promote legitimate software in
enterprises, especially in state-owned enterprises where government
has more control," said Zhang Qin, deputy commissioner of the State
Intellectual Property Office.
(Xinhua News Agency April 20, 2006)