Author Topic: Nintendo Makes Piracy Busts In China  (Read 2310 times)

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Offline PGC-Agent Cooper

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Nintendo Makes Piracy Busts In China
« on: February 11, 2003, 08:23:47 AM »
NOA announces three new seizures of counterfeit Game Boy Games in China.  Also more news about Lik Sang's dealings with Nintendo.

Nintendo Bolsters Anti-Piracy Seizures in China; Current Raids Build On Record-Setting 2002 Efforts


REDMOND, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 11, 2003--Nintendo of America Inc. today announced three new seizures of counterfeit Game Boy(R) games in the People's Republic of China, expanding its record to 135 anti-piracy raids against separate illegal manufacturers and retailers in that country alone in 2002.


The January raids netted more than 300,000 pirated pieces of Game Boy(R) Advance packaging, manufacturing components and counterfeit versions of current best sellers including Pokemon(R) Ruby and Pokemon(R) Sapphire. In addition, three workers were found hiding inside shipping boxes for fear of being caught by the Chinese authorities for their involvement in counterfeit activities.


The raids targeted Guangdong Bu Bu Da Electronic Co., Ltd., Asik Technology, Ltd., and Electronic Dragon Ltd., all in China's Guangdong Province. Nintendo seized one million counterfeit products in 2002, and estimates the counterfeiting of software cost the company, together with its publishers and developers, $649 million in lost sales worldwide last year.


"Nintendo has never been more aggressive in protecting our unique global brand and our key intellectual properties and China can expect the largest share of our attention again in 2003," says Jodi Daugherty, director, anti-piracy, Nintendo of America Inc.


Last year, in communications with the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Nintendo identified the region of Hong Kong and the countries of China, Mexico and Paraguay as failing to adequately protect the company's intellectual property rights. Over the year, seizures were conducted in each of these nations, as well as 14 others.


The most significant raid in 2002 occurred in September at the Lik Sang International plant in Hong Kong, where the company manufactured a device called the Flash Advance Linker, which allowed users to make unlimited copies of Game Boy software products.


Also, in a separate action last October, Nintendo was awarded $1.5 million in damages and an order allowing destruction of all manufacturing and assembly equipment seized at an illegal counterfeit facility in Panama.

Billy Berghammer
Founder -- Planet GameCube.com

Offline Fammy2000

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Nintendo Makes Piracy Busts In China
« Reply #1 on: February 11, 2003, 09:03:09 AM »
Not only did they retrieve 300,000 pieces of illegal goods, but they found three people (in shipping boxes no less)! That's amazing. Piracy really can hurt people. And those people are the ones that hide in boxes. Good thing they didn't ship those boxes. That'd be a PR nightmare.

Serioulsly, this is good news.

Suprising was the Lik Sang news. Apparently Nintendo is trying to make an example.
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Offline LOUiE

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Nintendo Makes Piracy Busts In China
« Reply #2 on: February 11, 2003, 07:51:17 PM »
All I got to say is, GO BIG N, er... NINTENDO!!!
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Offline Grey Ninja

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Nintendo Makes Piracy Busts In China
« Reply #3 on: February 11, 2003, 08:42:48 PM »
I can't say that I was that happy when I heard that Nintendo busted Lik Sang a while back, but now that I know the story, I fully support them.  I am also quite happy to hear that Nintendo is finally kicking butt in China.
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