Home / IPR Protection in China / Photo Gallery Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
47 mln illegal publications destroyed nationwide
Adjust font size:

Chinese authorities destroyed 47.18 million pornographic and illegal publications on Sunday as part of an ongoing campaign to strengthen intellectual property rights (IPR) protection.

The campaign, organized by the national anti-pornography and anti-piracy office and carried out in 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities, marked an unprecedented number of publications destroyed in a single day.

More than 17 provinces eliminated more than 1 million pieces each, with Guangdong topping the list, destroying 12 million, or a quarter of the total.

China has attached great importance to IPR protection, which has been considered as a national strategy to help build an innovative country, said Liu Binjie, director of the National Copyright Administration.

According to official statistics, China has in the past 20 years closed down 238 pirate disc production lines, solved more than 400,000 cases of IPR infringement and confiscated more than 1.3 billion illegal publications.

China has also held activities such as "national intellectual property protection promotion week" to raise public awareness. The fifth such week began on Sunday, during which 18 ministries are scheduled to hold events.

Official statistics show that last year, 2,967 people were arrested for suspected violations of IPR. Public security departments investigated 2,283 cases of IPR infringement and made arrests in 2,008 cases, involving 1.49 billion yuan (about 213 million US dollars).

(Xinhua News Agency April 21, 2008)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Pirate software and DVD gang caught in global net
- Producers and websites ink deal on IPR protection
- China's 18 ministries join hands to publicize IPR protection
- Better IPR protection 'takes time'
- Report cites progress on IPR protection in 2007
Most Viewed >>
- 'Forbidden Kingdom' opens to public
- Auto China 2008 staged in Beijing
- Why Washington plays 'Tibet Roulette' with China
- Thousands rally in LA against CNN's remarks
- Chinese news anchor's open letter to Cafferty of CNN

Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys