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posted by janrinok on Thursday September 29 2022, @08:44PM   Printer-friendly

U.S. Copyright Groups Are Concerned About Russia's Handling of Online Piracy

With its invasion of Ukraine, Russia ignited a regional conflict with global repercussions. Thousands of lives have been lost and many more ruined. In response, many U.S. entertainment industry companies took a stand by ceasing their Russian operations. Through the IIPA, many of the same companies now want to urge Russia to keep online piracy in check.

[...] As we have documented previously, more than a hundred Russian movie theaters have started to show pirated movies in Russia in response to the sanctions. While clearly illegal, the chairman of the Russian Association of Cinema has sympathy for the plight of these struggling theater owners.

The Russian Government has also made matters worse for US copyright holders. A few months ago, it proposed a 'forced licensing' bill that would effectively legalize piracy of media produced by "unfriendly" states, including the US.

These developments are causing concern among organizations such as the IIPA, which counts the MPA, RIAA, and ESA among its members. The group recently shared its thoughts with the US Trade Representative for its annual review of Russia's World Trade Organization (WTO) obligations.

[...] "The harm caused by commercial-scale piracy in Russia cannot be adequately addressed with civil measures alone; rather, enhanced administrative actions and penalties and criminal remedies are needed," IIPA writes.

When push comes to shove, copyright infringement just doesn't matter.

IIPA = International Intellectual Property Alliance. Letter to the Office of the United States Trade Representative (PDF).

Previously: Russia Mulls Legalizing Software Piracy as It's Cut Off From Western Tech


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday October 01 2022, @12:43PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday October 01 2022, @12:43PM (#1274448) Journal

    the Russian oligarchs didn't lose too much

    Keep in mind that the oligarchs aren't that powerful. Putin reshuffled them when he rose to power a couple decades ago (such as a media takeover that saw several oligarchs lose their Russian holdings). And at least two have likely been murdered since (Boris Berezovsky [wikipedia.org] and Nikolai Glushkov [wikipedia.org]).

    Basically, there's a large coterie of business leaders that got that way through patronage from Putin and maybe in a number of cases are merely property managers for Putin. My take is they aren't the ones who would initiate change in Russia by getting rid of Putin. You'll have to look elsewhere.