Strange Symphonies The whole is greater than the sum of its parts

18Jul/070

Intellectual Property Courts Established

So it seems like the Intellectual Property Courts I last discussed two months back are already established, and taking cases.

At the first sitting of the IP Court, an unemployed man was issued with an arrest warrant for not being present in a case in which he was in possession of 246 pirated songs in 24 cassettes.

Rosdi Mamat, 42, from Pasir Puteh in Kelantan did not show up when his name was called up at 3pm.

...

Rosdi is accused of committing the offence at an unnumbered stall at a night market in Jalan Kuching at 9.30pm on Nov 6, 2003.

If convicted, he can be fined up to RM20,000 or jailed five years, or both, under the Copyrights Act 1987.

In the same court, four other copyright cases were also heard.

How did they even find this person? Is this a case of remixing various tapes to create a playlist? If so is this illegal in Malaysia? If this was simply the case, then this could set the precedent making remixes is bad.

If only I could find more detail, any help guys? Time to look at the Malaysia Copyright Act of 1987, again...

You can misinterpret the first pagagraph of the article, to read that the main job of the IP courts is the appeasement of foreign countries.

Malaysia hopes to be removed from the international watch list for intellectual property offences with the setting up Intellectual Property (IP) Courts.

31May/070

The Rise of Intellectual Property Rights in Malaysia?

Copyleft
Most of you have probably heard of the dogs Lucky and Flo that has given Malaysia alot of airtime lately in international news.

If you haven't heard, its a strange case of believe it or not, these two dogs are especially trained to sniff out pirated DVDs! Believe it or not.

Its an interesting way to find pirated DVDs, and I had planned many times to write up posts on the issues of copyright, the success of Lucky and Flo, and the potential impact (goods and bads) that it may have. But today, I decided to actually publish something at least.

The Star reports that Malaysia is in line for a new court dealing with Intellectual Property and a new Act to go along with it. Like good buddies!

A new act eh? Makes me all the more curious as what could possible be in it...

Shafie also announced the drafting of a new Act to address the problem of illegal movie recording in cineplexes.

Although current laws relating to copyright and IP can be used to prosecute offenders, they may be some loopholes in them.

"The current laws may not cover the newer recording gadgets or technologies so that's why we need a new law," Shafie said.

He said the ministry is now discussing with the Attorney General's Chambers in drafting the "anti-camcording" law but he cannot specify when it will be completed.

Will it strengthen Intellectual Property in Malaysia, and how?

In another article by the Star, they report that Malaysian awareness for Intellectual Property is low.

Now you didn't need the Star to tell you did. I could have done so myself.

Of the hundreds of utility innovations and industrial designs patented every year, only about 8% of the applications were from Malaysians, he said.

  • Intellectual Property does not comprise of only Patents.
  • Patents are not an indicator of the "intellectual capacity" of a country

Going back to the first article it brings up:

Shafie said the cause for the delay was locating qualified judges that would be able to hear these cases.

Note: Emphasis by me.

In general its difficult to find people qualified to discuss intellectual property (I wonder if I'm qualified), due to the large disregard for Intellectual Property in Malaysia. Everyone knows it. Copyrighted work gets treated as if it were in the public domain over here.

Alright, lets give it some leeway in that the first article was focused on movies, and the second one on patents.

I personally think the bigger problem that needs to be addressed is exactly that: Malaysians have a large disregard for Intellectual Property.

And I don't think anyone here could argue against that. Therefore, will these actions being taken, address that issue?

Is the ill treatment of Intellectual Property good or bad? Well that is for another article.

My take is that I have benefited (not financially, but technically) from the proliferation and easy accessibility to pirated software. I am not the only one who has. I can guarantee you that a lot of Malaysia's youth have as well.

Does this make the act of piracy any less bad? Perhaps. Yes it is bad to steal another person's work.

So how do I give people the "easy accessibility" to tools, Free and Open Source Software. Because you have the right to give it away, for free or for profit.

If you want to remove piracy, at least make it easy for students to access the same materials, easily, (hopefully freely or extremely low cost), and legitly. First things that come to mind...Free Culture content, Creative Commons licensed content, Wikipedia.

Looking at it from another perspective, who are the biggest proponents for stronger Intellectual Property Rights? Who would also have the biggest gains?

Intellectual Property Rights is confusing stuff!

27Mar/071

Digg Malaysia, Malaysia’s Large Disrespect For Intellectual Property

Well I was waiting for it to hit the infamous digg.com to pick it up, and finally it has... Digg Clone in Malaysia (links to Digg Malaysia)

So Arsyan, you've finally been caught, and dugg. Happy?

The comments on digg's site are interesting. Basically not too many people are happy with it. Of course, who wouldn't be?
The main argument is, there is no problem copying Digg, but as long as you make it look different. There is even encouragement for localization, which I think should be the direction Digg Malaysia should take. It has a direct resemblance to version 2.0 of Digg. Even the comments given by Malaysians say this.

A Moment of Justice

At least a moment of justice was struck on the Internet when Digg Malaysia was dugg to death.

The Legal Solution

I am interested to see if Digg.com will try to seek legal action towards Digg Malaysia. Now this will be an interesting thing to see? Why? Because I don't recall ever seeing any sort of thing like this happen in Malaysian history. Especially with Malaysians understanding very little about Intellectual Property, making the case even more fun! Or maybe someone can update me. Best of luck to both sides!

Or how about if this were to happen?

An Alternate Solution

Am I the only one who sees the potential here? Kevin and Co. shouldn't be trying to shut these guys down, they should be handing them the olive branch. Localized versions of Digg, under the official company and trademark would make Digg even a stronger presence and more true to the "Content for Everyone" philosophy that I always thought Digg was about. I say instead of trying to get these guys in a court, the higher ups should try to make them an official branch.

Comment by TemporalRift

Sounds like an interesting idea.:P

Comments by (supposed) Malaysians

So I've found some comments on the site, and listed them down. Basically people Malaysians aren't too happy.

Note: All emphasis was added by me

wow, Malaysia memang boleh copy sia...
what a blatant act of counterfeiting, a 100% full duplicate, at least put some thought in changing the name and design? the site's making a bad name for my nation man, what a disgrace

Comment by orangysb

--

Malaysian, but I'm not proud of the blatant copying of other people's sites.

Change the name, graphics, hell, change everything and try to at least be creative. This is shameful!

Comment by Idyllrain

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Thank-you for proving to the entire world just how lame us Malaysians are at coming up with our own ideas and developing original internet services.

This Sucks

Comment by AceMcAbe

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being a malaysian, i wish there were more technopreneurs here who would actually put in effort into making original and high-quality websites, portals or social news sites; not blatant rip-offs and clones. yes we all love digg, but cloning it word for word, css for css just isn't the way to go.

Comment by jeremyisaacelee

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i think im gonna be sick...
doesnt make it better to know im malaysian either

Comment by praveenmarkandu

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I'm embarrassed to be Malaysian. We copy everything, and we are also always seeking worldly recognition by doing the most outlandish of things to get into the Guinness Book of Records. I think it's a Napoleon complex that all Malaysians suffer from. Like a shorter man wanting to get attention in a crowd of tall people, he stands on a box. And since we don't have an ounce of ingenuity in us, we go around and pull off a "copy pasta" on anything we see.

Comment by Onsokumaru

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Im malaysian, I think they should change the layout.

Comment by kayid

Conclusions

Obviously from the Malaysian responses, Malaysians aren't too happy about it, ashamed, and embarrassed.

The fact that people aren't too happy about is also important. This minor population understand the shame in copying original products. Wait a minute? Isn't that what the fight for piracy was all about? Do these people understand and respect IPR more than others? Especially when the product is a good one?

I bet a lot of Malaysians hold respect for digg.com.

  • Is this the best Malaysian technopreneurs can do?
  • How will Malaysia face piracy on the web?

So Arsyan, it seems you have brought shame to Malaysia. What are you going to do about it? Can you make Malaysians proud? At least thanks for highlighting how prevalent piracy and disrespect for intellectual property is in Malaysia. This is a good example, and I hope that it strikes into the hearts of many Malaysians (or perhaps just the readers of Digg).

Some Better News

Actually it's not all bad news. I was linked to BizBox.com.my and look and behold, they use the Tango Desktop Project Icon set. All good and dandy, but I didn't see any attribution. So I decided to email them, and they noticed it as well, and said they will put it up soon :) . Looking forward to it.