More than half of Brazilians say they bought pirated products in 2011

G1 - 19 / -9 / 2011

Check report from National Journal

For the first time since 2006, the number of people who admitted to buying a pirated product in the year surpassed those who denied having committed the crime in a survey by Fecomércio-RJ, in partnership with the research institute Ipsos, points out the study referring to 2011 , released on Monday (19).

While last year 48% of respondents said they bought counterfeit items, in 2011 the percentage rose to 52%. In absolute numbers, 74,3 million Brazilians reportedly committed the crime this year, 6 million more than in 2010.

The survey also shows a significant adherence of classes A and B to the practice, increasing from 47% of respondents in 2010 to 57% this year. The advance comes despite the fact that 82% of them believe that piracy fuels tax evasion and 75% think that it harms the revenue of trade.

Price
The main justification for the purchase of the pirated product, 94% of respondents, is the price, followed by the ease of finding the item. A large proportion of them, 40%, do not believe that the use of these products can have any negative consequences for themselves.

The most purchased pirate products, according to the survey, are CDs and DVDs, followed by toys and fashion items, which have shown significant growth this year.

The survey was carried out with 70 people in 9 cities across the country, including XNUMX metropolitan regions.

Inmetro will inspect the replacement market

Folha de S. Paulo - 14/08/2011

Automotive parts and accessories will be inspected by Inmetro (National Institute of Metrology, Standardization and Industrial Quality). The initiative is part of the Compulsory Certification Program for Automotive Components. In order to receive the Inmetro seal, products will have to meet the security requirements described in Ordinance 301, published in the Official Gazette on July 21.

“The goal is to make it mandatory to meet safety requirements for auto parts used in the aftermarket, as those used in new vehicles are subjected to the quality process established and controlled by the automakers,” says Alfredo Lobo, director of Quality at Inmetro.
The Inmetro seal will be mandatory for auto parts for vehicles manufactured or imported from January 1, 2000.

Components for the assembly line, recall and offline cars that were manufactured until December 31, 1999 are exempt.

According to the coordinator of the GMA (Automotive Maintenance Group), Antônio Carlos Bento, the measure will serve 71% of the circulating fleet in Brazil, estimated at more than 40 million vehicles.

“We are taking an important step to guarantee the origin and quality standard of products in the aftermarket. The consumer will be able to demand parts with the Inmetro seal ”, he says.

Manufacturers and importers will have until January 2013 to adapt to the new standards. The trade will have until July 2014 to make items available in retail in accordance with the rule.

The ordinance includes seven components for the aftermarket: suspension dampers, electric fuel pumps, horns, aluminum alloy pistons, lock pins and rings, piston rings, bearings and lamps for automotive vehicles.

Windshield safety glasses (tempered and laminated), tires and wheels are already regulated products.

PIRACY

For Sindipeças (National Union of the Industry of Components for Motor Vehicles), the certification of components reduces the risk of accidents and inhibits the illegal trade in counterfeit parts and accessories.

“Like what happened in the toy market, Inmetro's certification and seal will combat piracy and create barriers to the entry of goods into the country that do not respect minimum quality standards,” says Paulo Butori, president of Sindipeças.

New in Brazil, the standard is already a reality in the USA, Australia and countries of the European Union.

Inmetro was based on American and European rules to develop the Brazilian program.

DF against piracy

Jornal Alô Brasília - 02/08/2011

The Secretariat of Public and Social Order (SEOPS) in partnership with the National Council for Combating Piracy, of the Ministry of Justice, holds the 1,4st District Seminar on Training to Combat Piracy for Military Policemen. The initiative is the largest ever made in Brazil, both in number of people and hours. In all, 2 newly appointed police officers will be trained on August 3 and XNUMX, in the Auditorium of the Military College of Brasília.

The objective of the seminar is to prepare agents for the 2014 World Cup, as Brasilia is in the race to host the opening of the world cup. FIFA maintains, among other requirements, an energetic and intolerant stance towards the crime of Copyright Infringement in the vicinity of the games.

During the event's lectures, the current Brasilian scenario and ways to combat and differentiate original and counterfeit products will be presented, in addition to defining the concepts of counterfeiting and piracy, as well as the legal aspects of the crime of Copyright Infringement.

The seminar will include the Federal Revenue Service, the Public Ministry of the Federal District and Territories, the Public Security Secretariat, as well as supporting bodies, such as the Antipiracy Association of Cinema and Music (APCM), the Brazilian Association of Software Companies (ABES), the Brand Protection Group (BPG), the National Forum Against Piracy and Illegality (FNCP), the Brazilian Institute for Competitive Ethics (ETCO), and the National Association for the Guarantee of Intellectual Rights (ANGARDI).

Seizures data

From January to July 24, 2011, SEOPS - general coordinator of the Piracy Combat Committee of the Federal District - seized 100.571 pirated products in irregular businesses in the Federal District.

Check the schedule:

1st DISTRICT TRAINING SEMINAR TO COMBAT PIRACY FOR MILITARY POLICE

Date: 2 and 3 August 2011

Hours: 8 am to 12 pm and 14 pm to 18 pm; 8am to 13pm

Location: Auditorium of the Military College of Brasília;

Organization: SEOPS / GDF and CNCP / MJ

Participants: 1400 military police officers from the PMDF Police Training Course / 2010-2011;

DAY 2 - TUESDAY

8 pm - 9 am - Opening

9:10 pm - 10:50 pm- Lecture on Notions about Piracy and Counterfeiting - essential legal aspects with the prosecutor Antonio Suxberguer, from MPDFT

10:50 pm - 11:50 pm - Lecture on the Panorama of the fight against Piracy in Brazil with Representative of the Executive Secretariat of the National Council for Combating Piracy CNCP / MJ

From 14 to 15- Lecture on the Panorama of the fight against Piracy in the Federal District with the representative of the Secretary of State for Public and Social Order of the Federal District, Undersecretary of Public and Social Order Operations, with Lieutenant Colonel of PM Alexandre Sérgio

15:30 pm - 16:40 pm- Lecture on Piracy and Anthropology - (In) formal and (I) lawful: “popular globalization” from an anthropological perspective, with Professor Andrea Lobo, from the Department of Anthropology at the University of Brasília

16:40 pm - 17:50 pm- Lecture on Trademark Counterfeiting, with representative from the National Health Surveillance Agency (Anvisa)

DAY 3 - WEDNESDAY

From 8 to 8- Lecture on Piracy of musical and audiovisual works with representative of the Antipiracy Association of Cinema Music (APCM)

8:40 pm - 9:20 pm- Lecture on trademark counterfeiting (various products), with a representative from the Brand Protection Group (GPM)

9h20 at 10h - Lecture on software piracy with a representative of the Brazilian Association of Software Companies (ABES)

10:10 pm - 10:50 pm- Lecture on trademark counterfeiting (various products), with representative from the National Forum Against Piracy

10:50 pm - 11:30 pm- Lecture on toy counterfeiting with a representative of the National Association for the Guarantee of Intellectual Rights (ANGARDI)

11:30 pm - 12:10 pm- Lecture on counterfeiting brands (cigarettes) with a representative of the Brazilian Institute of Competition Ethics

12h10 at 13h- Closing

Police close pirated CD and DVD distributor

Jornal da Globo - 26/07/2011

The police of São Paulo closed this Tuesday (26) a distributor with about two million CDs, DVDs and pirated games.

Check out the video of the report here

The business card of one of the counterfeiters said MP3. The four-story building draws a lot of attention from those who pass through downtown São Paulo, but only those who knew about the scheme could enter.

“The person knocked on the door, and the person in charge of the whole building answered it, allowed entry and controlled the entry of people and material,” says the military police officer, Lieutenant Elder Bezerra.

When the police arrived at the pirate distributor, both buyers and sellers went up the stairs, broke into an iron gate and jumped over the wall. When they fell, they broke the neighbor's roof and ran away. The building owner was arrested.

On each floor, the police found several boxes of different counterfeiters. All with a wide variety of CDs, DVDs and electronic games. Among them films that have not even premiered in Brazilian cinemas.

The police were surprised by the creativity of those who work there. In a box, for example, a delivery system worked, that is, the person called, ordered the pirated CD, the goods were placed in a suitcase and delivery was made by couriers. City officials used a truck to take the piracy away.

Small crimes

Source: The State of S. Paulo - 06/12/2010

By Carlos Alberto Sardenberg

Seventy million Brazilians bought some pirated product in the last year. Seventy million! This is equivalent to half the population over 16 years old. The vast majority, almost 80%, buy CDs and DVDs and made more than one acquisition in the period surveyed by the Federation of Commerce of the State of Rio de Janeiro (Fecomércio-Rio).

Let's say there are four purchases, on average, per person. We therefore have something like 280 million “small crimes” committed by, say, legal citizens.

The consumer, in theory, does not necessarily know that he is practicing piracy. He doesn't have to go to a dark alley, with a wad of notes in his pocket, to exchange for a DVD hidden in a paper bag. It makes the purchase in the open, in stores, kiosks in crowded galleries or even in camelódromos installed in entirely public places.

If you want invoice, not electronic, you will receive. It is true that sometimes the seller gives the flag and asks the customer: what value do you want on the bill? But as the consumer does everything in public, he can maintain as good the assumption that if the trade is there, in the eyes of everyone and even the authorities, it can only be legal. The counter salesman - not the business owner - can claim the same thing. It is there, working in plain sight, so ... It can even stick in the courts.

Now, let's speak frankly. Everyone knows you're a pirate. In fact, people look for that trade because they know it is cheaper there, much cheaper. Everyone also knows that there are two types of pirated products: one is entirely counterfeit, a copy generally of worse quality; another is the legitimate but smuggled product. This is a little more expensive, according to rules known in this medium.

Thus, we no longer have the presumption of innocence, but tacit consent to the commission of a crime. And here's the real problem: tolerance for “small crimes” is on people's minds, in the culture of society. Attention, it is not only in popular culture, because, through research by Fecomércio-Rio, even though most buyers are in the poorest classes, half of the people in classes A and B also acquire piracy.

Buying in the illegal trade appears as a behavior similar to a small tax evasion in the Income Tax, a consultation without a receipt, an employee hired without a formal contract and so on.

For some, it is pure cleverness - "I am not a fool to pay R $ 35 for a CD, if there is a corner for R $ 2". Others try to present the pirated purchase as an act of rebellion, a kind of protest against capitalism - "I am not going to give money to these companies and these guys". Still others present their attitude as a political act against the system - "Am I going to pay taxes for these politicians to steal?"

All three of these categories know they are cheating. They know perfectly well that they are committing a crime, but they consider it normal behavior in this society. Killing someone cannot. But “small” crimes, why not, if everyone does?

It is, therefore, a cultural and political problem. The person here reaches the elite of society - by money, by election or by appointment - and the first thing that occurs to him is that he no longer has to respect the law and the rules. Skip the line, buy a ticket without getting in line, park in a prohibited place, go through the red light (notice how official vehicles commit all these types of infractions), take out an identity card in the section chief's office, find the special treatment natural . Young people rising in life, but who have not yet arrived there, aspire to this treatment and, for a start, they are already, for example, parking in a vacancy for the elderly.

Now, in this climate, why not buy a pirate, even if the person has money to buy it legally? For these people, the problem is not money, but cleverness, trickery, taking advantage.

Which leads us to another side of this story, that of people who buy the pirated product because they have no way of acquiring the legal one. These are, say, the least guilty. They know they are not doing the right thing, but they cannot resist temptation. They buy the last pirated film because that is the only possibility. And they say they would buy it legally, if it was cheaper.

And here we fall in the Brazil cost. Legal production and trade pay high interest on capital, exaggerated taxes, spend resources on obtaining licenses, operating licenses, payment of various fees. It is expensive and complicated to do business honestly in Brazil.

This is the powerful cause of informality and piracy. There are small and even medium-sized enterprises that simply would not survive within the law. This presents them with a dilemma: in informality, they cannot grow beyond a certain, limited point; formalized, they risk dying prematurely. In any case, the damage is to the national economy.

There are therefore two problems. One cultural, the other economic. And the ugliest role is that of the rich and the elite.

 

Operation against piracy closes three malls and street in downtown São Paulo

Source: Portal R7, 07/06/2011

The Korai, Duprat and 25 shopping malls, located at Rua Barão de Duprat, at number 225, in the central region of São Paulo, have remained closed to the public since Monday night (6). State, federal and municipal agencies are in place to inspect that it aims to combat piracy and tax evasion.

As of Tuesday afternoon (7), 88 stores were inspected and agents seized about 100 illegal objects, which were placed in 416 bags. Among employees and shopkeepers, 320 people were identified and qualified and 18 were conducted by the Federal Police. They may be notified to leave the country.

According to the Municipal Secretariat of Urban Security, still in the operation, coordinated by the Integrated Security Management Office, three people were referred to the 1st Police District. Two of them for hiding 1.600 counterfeit watches and 400 cell phones without an invoice inside a vehicle. The other, for selling 7.500 pirated CDs and DVDs.

In addition to the three shopping malls, Rua Barão de Duprat is closed by GCM (Guarda Civil Metropolitana). The agents allow the movement of traders, employees on the spot. According to the secretariat, there is still no date for the end of the operation and reopening of the malls.

History

In April, the inspection also closed the Pagé gallery, a traditional popular shopping center located in the region of 25 de Março, downtown São Paulo, for ten days. The operation resulted in the seizure of tons of pirated and smuggled goods and, soon after, the municipal administration announced that it will transform the traditional shopping center into an outlet, a set of stores that sell products from major brands directly from the factory.

Although the measure was announced by the city as a major action to combat illegal trade, for experts heard by the R7, the fight against smuggling would be more effective if it stopped operating in retail locations.

According to security and social affairs scholars, repressive measures against smuggling and piracy hotspots only cause illegal trade to simply migrate to another point.

 

The cost of dishonesty

Source: O Globo, 6/6/2011

By FERNANDO RAMAZZINI

Common sense points out that pirates, since the beginning of history, have been thieves. Exclude the romanticism associated with the figures of some buccaneers and what remains are individuals who looted, plundered, stole the property of others. They preferred small boats, the fastest, to thus enrich illicitly.

The practice of dishonesty has crossed the times and permeates today, no longer linked to the men of the sea. It is associated with corrupt politicians, unscrupulous people from the most varied sectors, smugglers, street vendors and their counterfeit products.

But it is necessary to understand that it is also dishonest for anyone to cooperate with a fraudulent system. It is also dishonest to buy a product known to be pirated. Consumers who purchase fake products must be aware that it helps to finance organized crime, contributes to stop generating jobs and helps to reduce government investments because of taxes that are not collected.

Dishonesty is the abandonment of a permanent advantage for a temporary advantage, as the XNUMXth century American lawyer and author Christian Nevell Bovee brilliantly summarizes. In addition to frustrating the consumer in terms of quality, durability and efficiency, the piracy of certain products, such as medicines, sunglasses, cigarettes and beverages, can represent serious damage to the consumer's health.

Clearly, a counterfeiter is not interested in producing merchandise with the same quality as the original. Whether using components that do not undergo any health surveillance, making use of unsatisfactory manufacturing processes or applying improper storage, the result always brings an associated harm.

Cheap, expensive, contraband, pirated product: the black market still handles considerable sums that pass by society. Estimates indicate that Brazil lost US $ 20 billion to piracy last year, in taxes not collected and losses for companies. The problem is for all of us who accept being deceived by items of dubious quality and who make us accomplices in dishonesty.

And for us Brazilians, who tend to think that the problem is always that of others, that it is always the others who harm, that only politicians transgress, it is necessary to know that those who agree with dishonesty are dishonest. When buying that fashion movie DVD for R $ 5, or a pack of cigarettes for R $ 1, don't just think about the supposed savings you make. Also remember the jobs you are failing to generate, the violence you contribute, the public improvements you fail to finance. Yes, the problem and the responsibility are also ours!

FERNANDO RAMAZZINI is director of the Brazilian Association to Combat Counterfeiting.

 

Rio loses R $ 20 billion a year in revenue from piracy

Source: O Globo Online - Rio de Janeiro / RJ - 17/12/2010

RIO - The Disque Antipirataria, service created by the State Legislative Assembly (Alerj) to receive denunciations and complaints about the commercialization of pirated products in Rio de Janeiro received, during the year, a total of 478 denunciations. The irregular products most cited by the complainants were CDs, DVDs, sporting goods and medicines.

According to the president of the Alerj Anti-Piracy Commission, deputy Dionísio Lins, the State of Rio de Janeiro today loses about R $ 20 billion in revenue per year due to informality, failing to generate approximately 18 thousand new jobs.

To try to raise awareness and guide consumers at the time of purchase, in addition to showing that the acquisition of counterfeit products is considered a crime, the Alerj Anti-Piracy Commission carried out during the year about 120 educational campaigns with the distribution of the Eye Live - Say No to booklet Piracy in several neighborhoods in the city. Commission technicians were also in public and private schools, in order to prepare young consumers and encourage debates on the subject.

- The number of pirated products sold in the city of Rio has been increasing. There are toys, clothes, electronic products, lamps and sneakers sold without any type of certification, which harms the legalized trade - points out Dionísio Lins.

Shopping time tips

According to the Anti-Piracy Commission, consumers should pay attention to the following tips to avoid buying counterfeit products.

In the case of toys, it is essential that those responsible pay attention to details, such as the printing on the packaging of the child's age for which the product is intended, the assembly instructions and the Inmetro seal. If the toy is imported, the product information must be in Portuguese.

When buying clothes, the consumer needs to observe if the pieces are printed with the textile composition and the washing method, avoiding future losses.

The Antipiracy Dial is open from Monday to Friday, from 10 am to 17 pm, and calls 0800.282.6582.