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Fake Angry Birds copycats booming in China market

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SHANGHAI: When Peter Vesterbacka visited China last spring, the marketing chief for Rovio, the Finnish firm behind the video game Angry Birds, saw fake Angry Birds products everywhere - and he was happy about it.

"I realised that China was already happening in a big way for us," Vesterbacka said in an interview.

"When you see all these knockoffs, you know that there is a lot of demand."

That rosy view of an intellectual property problem that has vexed global brands for decades - and sparked friction in China's relations with the United States and others - underpins Rovio's novel approach to the world's fastest growing consumer market.

While many companies go on the offensive against counterfeiters with legions of lawyers, Rovio is taking a mixed approach: waving a legal stick at some pirates, but seeking ways to cooperate with, and appropriate ideas from, others.

"It is definitely not a traditional approach," said Kenny Wong, a partner at the law firm Mayer Brown in Hong Kong.

While sceptics may see spin behind Rovio's enthusiasm for Chinese fakes, there are also benefits to accepting the reality that China is the world's top source of intellectual property ripoffs and its courts can't always help.

ONE BILLION DOWNLOADS

Rovio boasts a billion downloads of its video game , launched in late 2009, in which cartoon birds are hurled from a slingshot at pigs that stole their eggs. China, with 140 million downloads, is the second largest Angry Birds market behind the United States.

The firm is planning to unleash a blitz of retail stores and Angry Birds "activity parks" in China starting next month.

Paul Chen, Rovio's General Manager China, says the company is concerned about infringement on its intellectual property and does go after some pirates, especially those found to produce harmful goods.

But, he adds: "We tend to want to collaborate." Rovio says it is recruiting some IP infringers to be partners, and even offering some of them free ad space on the Angry Birds app.

It also now sells officially licensed Angry Birds balloons after Vesterbacka saw a pirated one for sale in Beijing earlier this year and liked the idea. He calls it "pirating the pirates".

"This actually can be a successful model," said Xiang Wang, a n IP lawyer with the firm Orrick. Makers of shoes, integrated circuit chips and laminated flooring are among those that have successfully co-opted counterfeiters in China, he said.

The alternative - attacking pirates in court - can be a morass.

"You can win on paper, but paper means nothing. When you go to enforce it, local companies pay the judges, they pay the local government officials, so enforcement will take years," Wang said.

INITIAL STRATEGY

Mayer Brown's Wong likens Rovio's enthusiasm about knockoffs to the way new stars court media attention: Early on, there is no such thing as bad press, but that eventually changes.
 
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SHANGHAI: When Peter Vesterbacka visited China last spring, the marketing chief for Rovio, the Finnish firm behind the video game Angry Birds, saw fake Angry Birds products everywhere - and he was happy about it.

"I realised that China was already happening in a big way for us," Vesterbacka said in an interview.

"When you see all these knockoffs, you know that there is a lot of demand."

That rosy view of an intellectual property problem that has vexed global brands for decades - and sparked friction in China's relations with the United States and others - underpins Rovio's novel approach to the world's fastest growing consumer market.

While many companies go on the offensive against counterfeiters with legions of lawyers, Rovio is taking a mixed approach: waving a legal stick at some pirates, but seeking ways to cooperate with, and appropriate ideas from, others.

"It is definitely not a traditional approach," said Kenny Wong, a partner at the law firm Mayer Brown in Hong Kong.

While sceptics may see spin behind Rovio's enthusiasm for Chinese fakes, there are also benefits to accepting the reality that China is the world's top source of intellectual property ripoffs and its courts can't always help.

ONE BILLION DOWNLOADS

Rovio boasts a billion downloads of its video game , launched in late 2009, in which cartoon birds are hurled from a slingshot at pigs that stole their eggs. China, with 140 million downloads, is the second largest Angry Birds market behind the United States.

The firm is planning to unleash a blitz of retail stores and Angry Birds "activity parks" in China starting next month.

Paul Chen, Rovio's General Manager China, says the company is concerned about infringement on its intellectual property and does go after some pirates, especially those found to produce harmful goods.

But, he adds: "We tend to want to collaborate." Rovio says it is recruiting some IP infringers to be partners, and even offering some of them free ad space on the Angry Birds app.

It also now sells officially licensed Angry Birds balloons after Vesterbacka saw a pirated one for sale in Beijing earlier this year and liked the idea. He calls it "pirating the pirates".

"This actually can be a successful model," said Xiang Wang, a n IP lawyer with the firm Orrick. Makers of shoes, integrated circuit chips and laminated flooring are among those that have successfully co-opted counterfeiters in China, he said.

The alternative - attacking pirates in court - can be a morass.

"You can win on paper, but paper means nothing. When you go to enforce it, local companies pay the judges, they pay the local government officials, so enforcement will take years," Wang said.

INITIAL STRATEGY

Mayer Brown's Wong likens Rovio's enthusiasm about knockoffs to the way new stars court media attention: Early on, there is no such thing as bad press, but that eventually changes.


dude's.... If you post articles against chinese or some others ... their ego will hurt.... and will drag you into off-topic, by commenting against rupee falling, or Indian economy, or poverty etc... and you will fall on trap.....If you respond in same way.... mod's will pay attention ...and will ban Indians and will delete posts in case of other nationalities ....... finally their will be no sane arguments other than get banned........ other than Indians .. Chinese and other nationalities are free to posts any thread against India.....
:pakistan::pdf:
So my advice is too ignore them...... kindly respond to humans.....
 
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Just a game, i don't know why you guys making such fuzz about it? :angry:
 
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A Game Worth ? MILLIONS! after all it's business!
I hope You Get The Point now!

Angry Birds games are free in Playshop in Android. I never support paying for any software, i'm a opensource platform lover.:what:

kya yaar... saara maza kharaab kar diya.. :P

Harr Harr Mahadev.

Hey Prabhu, aapke rachaye huye jagat mein praniyo par kitna kasht hai, kripaya aap unpar dristi daan karenge. Ek kunji khel me kya rakha hai?

Prabhu ki jai ho.
 
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Fake food, fake cities and fake medicines the list goes on :disagree:
 
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