Or call it neo-nationalism.
Recently I had to field a question (as speaker in a seminar) from a Chinese delegate who complained that in Europe some people were fraudulently registering “famous Chinese brands”. I replied that I was having rather fun reading and knowing about that, as in China, every day foreign brands are fraudulently registered and our technologies are openly copied. I told him that now Chinese might start understanding that IPR is not something for foreigners only and Chinese should help to enforce the laws, for their own benefit.
A few days ago US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke appealed to China to help enforce the law, stressing that American companies every year lose billions of dollar due to IP theft. Of course the same for European companies.
Yesterday China Daily showed how pirated copies on Windows 7 are on sale in Beijing (20 RMB). What’s new? Many Chinese will tell you – that’s perfectly “ok”.
Then comes the Chinese cyber-extremist and nationalist gang, attacking Google for unauthorized copying of Chinese books. While later the official complaint was rectified (*), Chinese were complaining that “Google was looking down on the Chinese” by doing it. Ooooooh, I see, the Chinese can promptly copy foreign books and openly sell pirated copies, that’s OK, but the other way around?
I always say, beware of countries who put their national flag everywhere, on each house, cars, buildings, inside offices, on T-shirts, etc. We Belgians are not exactly in that league. Cannot imagine we run around with a Belgian flag on everything, people would rather ask if there was something wrong in our head.
It’s one more item for my book: the one way hypocrisy of Chinese in IPR and neo-nationalism. Robbing foreigners is cool (and justified). But don’t touch Chinese brands, books etc.
The only way they’ll learn is by being served the same treatment.
(*) Stephen Chen wrote in the SCMP on 26 Oct 09:
A Chinese copyright organisation admitted it misled mainland authors last week by using the wrong legal term when it accused Google of infringing its copyright.
The allegation set off an emotional row. The authors, believing that their books were now available for unauthorised downloading from Google’s digital library in the United States – which is not true – levelled harsh criticism against the internet company in the mainland media.
The record was set straight by Jia Jifeng, legal director of the China Written Works Copyright Society, who acknowledged yesterday he had used the wrong term.
Oktober Bierfest in Beijing
We took part in the launch of the German Oktober Bierfest in Beijing, in the grandiose Drei Kronen 1308 Brauhaus. Lots of beer (German, of course), but also together with our friend Charles Dukes, who took some great shots…
- German beer makes you younger?
- German beer has other effects…
Thanks Charles!
Filial piety and U.S. foreclosure victims
I am currently studying as much as I can the impact (or lack of) Confucianism on today’s Chinese society.
Central in Confucianism is the notion of “Filial Piety” – caring for and respecting the parents. While the new generation in China has put the notion a bit upside down – parents now supposed to do everything for the children and grandchildren without much return – the majority of the Chinese still very much adhere to the old principles. The issue is an important component of my book.
I was reading about the never-ending sad story of the U.S. housing market, with the foreclosures that make more and more people homeless.
I had read an article (author Peter Goodman – IHT 20 Oct 09) on the topic, when the starting lines hit me afterwards: a lady (Sheri West) in Cleveland ended up completely homeless, after sleeping in her car, months of sleeping on coaches of friends. She was forced to seek a place in a shelter for the homeless. But…
The article said she is the mother of three grown children, grandmother to six and great-grandmother to one; her husband left her.
So, what are the children doing about that? Apparently nothing.
While we miss here the complete background of the story, in most Asian countries that would be considered as a shame.
For the children.
Some Asian values put our Western world to shame; just hoping China will not copy the West.
Gilbert
Vice Chairman – China First International Chongyang Festival, Beijing 2009 Celebration event of World Illustrious Elderly
International Director, Managing Committee of China Ageing International Development Foundation
Oct 1 Parade last pictures
Been busy like hell and I needed time to go through the 2GB of pictures we all collected. Thanks to the Xinhua photographer who was with us on the float (I call it the BOAT) – he gave many high definition pics. Some of the pictures come from others, bit difficult to keep track.
There are some nice shots of the other foreigners walking along the float, including our daughter Valerie.
The pics show the actual parade once we started moving along Chang’an Avenue towards Tiananmen, till we passed Zhongnanhai and then turned away from the avenue much further to get to our bus.
It’s all now far behind us and life is back to normal (crazy, crazy).
This is the last series, I made a personal choice of the ones I liked most. We clearly had fun but we were also impressed by the massive amount of people – most of them enthusiastic and a bit surprized to see foreigners.
We also met, most of us, for a dinner at The Taj Pavillion (World Trade Center), organized and funded by our Indian “star” Manish Chopra, on 10 October. It was a fun evening with excellent Indian food. See also some pics.