A senior Chinese official has promised to strengthen anti-counterfeit laws after a high-profile call to action from Alibaba chairman Jack Ma was echoed by other industry leaders.
The e-commerce giant says that Minister of State Administration for
Industry and Commerce Zhang Mao acknowledged the comments made by Ma in
an open letter
published on the Twitter-like Weibo service, in which he called for
tougher penalties for counterfeiters and asked the government to do more
to help businesses fight the scourge.
Speaking last week at a press conference on the side-lines of a
government plenary meeting in Beijing, Zhang said last week it was
important to strengthen China's laws, according to Alibaba's Alizila news website, although there were few details available.
Zhang's comments are hardly going against the party line. Last year,
Zhang Xiangchen, China's deputy international-trade representative,
confessed during a trip to the US that intellectual property rights
(IPR) is still a fairly new concept in China and there is considerable
room for improvement in helping companies enforce those rights.
Ma's post was followed by similar exhortations from the China
Entrepreneurs Club and its former chairman, Lenovo Group founder Liu
Chuanzhi, which both issued their own statements asking the government
to "increase the legal cost of counterfeiting" and strengthen the legal
structure surrounding IPR protection.
This was followed by a series of comments from other influential
Chinese businessmen. The founder of electronics company Xiaomi - Lei Jun
- described fake goods as "a social cancer, a serious damage to the
image of the country and consumer confidence," and said it was time to
support efforts to get rid of them.
In similar vein, Lenovo president and chief executive Yang Yuanqing,
said there is a pressing need to establish a "complete legal system
against infringement" and also to make sure that counterfeiters "have to
pay a price they can't afford and even bear criminal responsibility."
Yang sits on the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political
Consultative Conference and has a record of advocacy for changes in
China’s laws. In 2014, he championed a push for a legal framework to
protect privacy and personal data on the web and personal devices.
Finally, Liu Yonghao, chairman of giant Chinese agribusiness New Hope
said "fake and shoddy goods affect our industries, the orderly
development of enterprises and also affect China’s international image."
He said counterfeiting is a cancer to innovation and must be
"resolutely resisted."
The tougher line being taken by China's industrial elite reflects the
fact that Chinese companies are increasingly involved in new product
development and the generation of IPR - and are being impacted by the
same criminals who have been faking goods from foreign corporations for
many years.
https://www.securingindustry.com/electronics-and-industrial/chinese-official-pledges-anti-counterfeit-push-/s105/a3700/#.WMlYb_KvKQd
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