China court orders Apple to pay for copyright violation
BEIJING - Technology giant Apple has been ordered to pay
compensation to eight Chinese writers and two companies for selling unlicensed
books online, state media reported.
The California-based company was ordered to pay a total fine
of 1.03 million yuan (US$165,908, S$203,000) to the plaintiffs for violating
their copyrights, Xinhua news agency said.
The ruling was issued Thursday by the Beijing No. 2
Intermediate People's Court, the report said.
Xinhua quoted a lawyer for the plaintiffs as saying they had
seen applications that contained unlicensed electronic versions of their books
available for download last year.
The downloads, which were described as being in great
quantity and resulted in large economic losses for the plaintiffs, the lawyer
was quoted as saying.
According to Xinhua, the court decided that the plaintiffs'
"right of communication through information networks" covered by
China's Copyright Law had been violated by Apple through its provision of apps
that included the unlicensed books.
"As an IP holder ourselves, we understand the
importance of protecting intellectual property and take copyright infringement
complaints very seriously," Apple spokeswoman Carolyn Wu said Friday.
"We're always updating our service to better assist
content owners in protecting their rights."
Wu said the company's App Store provides customers in China
with a selection of more than 700,000 apps created by the company's developer
community.
AFP
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