国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

   
 
New rules to fight online pirates
By Wang Xin (China Daily)
Updated: 2011-03-16

SAIC: Stronger powers in cross-regional cases and collection of evidence

The State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) is set to release new regulations to fight the sale of counterfeits on the Internet, a senior official said at a news conference during the National People's Congress that ended on Monday.

Two new regulations will govern cross-regional investigation and collection of evidence in online piracy and counterfeits, said Fu Shuangjian, SAIC vice-minister.

Authorities are now studying the issue and preparing the final draft, Fu said, declining to reveal details.

The vice-minister said online transactions in China are now worth more than 500 billion yuan ($76.1 billion) with 13 million people doing business over the Internet.

China's first ministry-level regulation on online transactions by the SAIC took effect in July last year, spelling out provisions for website establishment, operation and supervision.

Not civil disputes

Li Li, vice-secretary-general of the Shanghai Information Law Association, wrote on his blog that "the existing regulation provides grounds for administrative punishment more than anything else" and is not designed to settle civil disputes.

After it implemented the regulation last year, the SAIC began to encounter problems with cross-regional management and collection of digital evidence.

There is now an urgent need for relevant new regulations, Fu said.

Police nationwide investigated more than 5,400 intellectual property rights (IPR) cases - both online and in general society - valued at 4.5 billion yuan since last November, according to Meng Qingfeng, director-general of the Ministry of Public Security's Economic Crime Investigation Bureau.

Of those investigations, just 183 were from the Internet, but they carried a large value - some 500 million yuan, more than 10 percent of the total, Meng said.

In addition to new online regulations, revision of milestone laws governing trademarks and copyrights is also on the table for consideration by the State Council.

The nation's first trademark law was adopted in 1982, followed by the first copyright regulations in 1990. They have both been revised twice.

Many departments

Representatives of four other central government departments also attended the news conference on March 13 to talk about progress in the ongoing crackdown on counterfeits and piracy that began last November.

In addition to the SAIC and the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of Commerce, the State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO), the National Copyright Administration and the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine attended the news forum.

"Increased IPR protection is our rational choice and firm commitment," said He Hua, vice-commissioner of SIPO.

Developing an innovation-oriented country requires more creation of intellectual property along with its protection and management, He said.

"Without IPR protection, it is hard to achieve the goal of an innovation-oriented country," he noted.

Meng from the security bureau noted that "the fight against IPR crime is gathering momentum".

The police investigated nearly 9,300 IPR cases between 2006 and 2010, an increase of 60 percent over the previous five years.

Some 265,000 trademark violations were investigated during the same period, said Fu from the SAIC, with 56,000 infringements probed in 2010 alone, a 9.78 percent rise over 2009.

"We are approaching concerned departments to discuss the possibility of extending the campaign," said Li Chenggang, director-general of the Department of Treaty and Law at the Ministry of Commerce.

"We will evaluate the current campaign's plan and effect to help build an effective long-term mechanism," Li said.

The nationwide crackdown was scheduled to run through end of March, but it will now be extended to June, according to the latest notice issued by the State Council.

'Increase punishment'

Vice-Minister Liu Pingjun of the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said that his group "suggests changing the law to increase punishment (for making and selling counterfeits)".

Under the current law, police and prosecutors cannot investigate an IPR case unless its value surpasses 50,000 yuan.

The infringement act itself, rather than the result, should be the determining factor to convict an offender, Liu said.

No matter the value, a case should be passed to the police for more severe punishment if it is related to people's health or security, he said.

China Daily

(China Daily 03/16/2011 page17)


江北区| 石河子市| 宜兰县| 容城县| 阜平县| 永仁县| 台江县| 安丘市| 肇源县| 吐鲁番市| 精河县| 墨竹工卡县| 广西| 三亚市| 岳西县| 健康| 甘孜县| 合肥市| 东乡| 丰城市| 东乡族自治县| 平武县| 江都市| 巴青县| 五常市| 沾益县| 逊克县| 眉山市| 瓦房店市| 巴中市| 包头市| 遂平县| 同仁县| 广德县| 南充市| 体育| 芜湖市| 万盛区| 富宁县| 昌江| 遂昌县|