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          Domestic

          Sohu.com CEO calls for end to Internet piracy

          (China Daily/Agencies)
          Updated: 2009-11-16 08:00

          Sohu.com CEO calls for end to Internet piracy

          Sohu.com is featured at a recent exhibition in Shanghai. The company called on China's online community to help clean up piracy on the Internet. The company blamed piracy for hindering development of both the Internet and movie industry in the country. [Asianewsphoto]

          Piracy, long a problem for foreign media companies in China, also stands to stifle innovation by the country's own dynamic Internet industry, the chief executive of one of China's oldest Web companies said.

          "China needs to clean up piracy on the Internet or face a lag in innovation," Charles Zhang, chief executive of Sohu.com, said at one of China's larger Internet conferences earlier this month in Beijing.

          "The Internet in China has reached an intense and more developed stage," he said. "Protecting intellectual property is becoming even more important," he said. "Solving piracy on the Internet will help the piracy situation in China."

          Zhang is one of a small but increasingly vocal group of figures in China's fragmented media community calling for officials to address a problem previously considered a major thorn for foreign players trying to crack the China market.

          In September, Sohu was one of several companies that led the formation of an alliance with 110 Internet video copyright owners to tackle Internet piracy in China.

          Copyright controversies have pulled in not only China's small Internet companies, but also major players like search leader Baidu.com, which at one point was sued by major record companies for allowing illegal sharing of copyrighted music over its website.

          More recently, a group representing Chinese authors has accused US-based Google.com of violating copyrights with its digital library, a claim that Google denied by saying the service complies with international law.

          Zhang also blamed piracy for hindering development of a vibrant movie industry in China, where illegal CDs are usually available within days of a movie's theatrical release for the equivalent of less than $2.

          "If we don't solve the problem of piracy, no one will buy movies or watch TV shows," Zhang said. "Everyone will watch it on the Internet, and this will pull down the innovation streak in China."

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          China is one of the world's fastest-growing film markets, but it has also been one of the toughest for foreign movie makers because of piracy and strict limits on the number of films they can export to China each year.

          Industry estimates are relatively few, but most put losses from movie piracy in China at billions of dollars each year.

          To cope with increasing Internet copyright disputes is also very important for the country's Internet industry, officials said.

          Gao Lulin, vice director of the Internet Society of China, said at this month's Internet conference that his organization had built an intermediation network to resolve disputes on Internet infringements.

          Chen Jinchuan, the presiding judge of the IPR (intellectual property rights) division of Beijing Municipal High People's Court, said the court has agreed to generalize the intermediation mechanism to courts in the whole city.

          Insiders said that building the intermediation network is an effective way to explore the settlement mechanism on IPR disputes.

          The Internet Society of China established the intermediation center as early as 2008, and more than 50 enterprises have submitted letters asking for dispute resolution.

           

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