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Piracy hotspot Bangladesh bootlegged to bankruptcy

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Piracy hotspot Bangladesh bootlegged to bankruptcy

By Shafiq Alam (AFP) – 5 hours ago

DHAKA — Bangladeshi pop icon Azam Khan has amassed legions of fans and dozens of hits over a 40-year career -- but he's always flat broke because of rampant music piracy.

When the 61-year-old star, revered for modernising the staid Bangla music scene in the 1970s, was diagnosed with mouth cancer this year he had to beg fans, including Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, to fund life-saving treatment.

"I've recorded 17 best-selling albums over my career but I have made less than 700,000 taka (10,000 dollars) in royalties," Khan told AFP from his sickbed in his modest two-bedroom house in the capital Dhaka.

"If I'd had this many hit albums in Europe, I'd own a private jet. In Bangladesh, rickshaw drivers will sometimes give me a free ride out of pity," he added.

Khan's experience is an extreme example of a broader global trend: demand for music is rising, but street piracy through counterfeit CDs and online piracy means profits for record companies and artists are being hit.

In Asia, street piracy is the major problem, which experts say is partly because options for consumers to buy or download music legally are limited. Apple's online iTunes store, for example, is still unavailable in most of the region.

This means that in markets like Bangladesh, where top music albums can sell millions of copies, consumers have little choice but to buy from music pirates.

"Sometimes it is literally impossible to buy legal copies of an album, the only thing available in the market is pirated disks," said Kumar Bishwajit, who heads the Music Industry Owners Association of Bangladesh.

As a result, intellectual property theft is a thriving billion-dollar industry in Bangladesh, and this has decimated the local music industry, said Nazmul Haq, owner of music firm G-Series.

Ten major Bangla-language recording companies, all long-established names, have folded in five years, and even major mobile phone companies routinely steal hit songs to use as ringtones without paying royalties, he said.

"If we have a hit album, we can make money only on the day of release. The next day bootleg disks are flooding markets, sold at a fraction of our price," he said.

Piracy is not limited to music: Bangladesh is also the Asian country with the highest software piracy rate, according to a list prepared by the Business Software Alliance (BSA) for 2009.

Globally, losses due to software piracy were more than 50 billion dollars in 2009, with some 16.5 billion of this in the Asia-Pacific region, the BSA said, adding that in Bangladesh some 91 percent of software used is pirated.

This is bad news for Bangladeshi software developers, said Mostafa Jappar, head of the Bangladeshi Computer Council, who copyrighted the first Bangla-language computer font in 1989.

"More than 10 million computers in Bangladesh use my font but less than one percent of these use original copies," he said, adding that piracy had cost him millions of dollars of lost revenue.

"It discourages entrepreneurs from developing more Bangla-language software and has cost the country tens of thousands of new jobs," he added.

Bangladesh is trying to crack down on pirates, passing a comprehensive anti-piracy law in 2000, updating it in 2005 with 10-year jail terms for pirates, and deploying the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) an elite police group.

In the 18 months to September this year, RAB teams conducted more than 500 raids, arresting 1,050 suspected copyright pirates, seizing more than two million disks and filing 375 cases, according to RAB statistics.

"It hasn't had a noticeable impact," said Major Masum Ahmed, head of the RAB's anti-piracy wing, adding that the vast majority of Bangladeshis do not realise buying fake goods is a crime.

The raids have focused on music, software and film, the worst-hit target of pirates. In March, Ahmed's team arrested the country's most notorious film pirate and extortionist, Biplab.

Biplab, who uses one name, would copy a film on the first day it was released then ring the producer, demanding large sums of cash in return for not selling the copy to the markets or to cable television networks.

"I don't know of any film producer in the country who has not received threats from Biplab. For the last three years, he held the whole movie industry hostage," said Motaleb Hossain, a director and a film producer.

For this reason, local film production has dropped off to less than 50 movies a year from more than 100 a year less than a decade ago, said Hossain, who is also president of the Bangladesh Film Producers Association.

Despite small successes such as Biplab's arrest, the government's chief copyright enforcer said the current crackdown was unlikely to endanger the pirates' empire.

"Piracy has become increasingly sophisticated in terms of technology, marketing and operations," Manjurur Rahman, the government's chief copyright enforcer, told AFP.

"Isolated raids won't produce any lasting result. We have to make people realise that copyright is important, that piracy doesn't pay long term -- if not, ultimately, we won't have Bangla music, films and software anymore."

Neither of cancer-stricken pop icon Azam Khan's two children have followed him into the music business -- his son has opted for an office job that might, Khan says ruefully, pay more than being a pop star does in Bangladesh.

"It is a sad thing that pirates have made millions from my albums but I am reduced to begging for money for medical care," he told AFP before heading off for another round of chemotherapy, funded by donations.
 
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Can it actually be impossible to buy legal copies of music albums in Bangladesh ?
Why is it so ? I assume there should be plenty of audio/video stores around cities.

In India we solved Bollywood piracy to an extent by companies releasing original dvd's at lower prices than pirated DVD's, forcing the pirates to sell originals.

I dont think itunes would help countries like Bangladesh. The main reason for the piracy is povery and low standard of living. In Europe people dont mind paying 1 euro for a iTunes download if they like it.
 
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Can it actually be impossible to buy legal copies of music albums in Bangladesh ?
Why is it so ? I assume there should be plenty of audio/video stores around cities.

In India we solved Bollywood piracy to an extent by companies releasing original dvd's at lower prices than pirated DVD's, forcing the pirates to sell originals.

I dont think itunes would help countries like Bangladesh. The main reason for the piracy is povery and low standard of living. In Europe people dont mind paying 1 euro for a iTunes download if they like it.

Now no body go to the long way of buying... they just download it... same thing is also happening in India... and pakistan.... if you want I can give tons of web address... including software.. movies... latest serial.. books etc...

There are also tons of foreign torrent download site... for all these....

N regarding cd what people do... they just buy a blank cd... and ask the sales person of audio cd store to burn all the albums that he want... along with software... n the shop only charge a lum sum amount 10 or 20 taka for burning... this is the condition of Bangladesh right now... so if any 1 can get these much amount of albums and softwares than why they should pay such a high amount to buy only 1 album....

Price of 1 album is 60-70 taka where as the process that I described above will cost only 25-30 taka including cd... n 1 can get 10-15 album, software or what ever they want...

So what you will choose... All these are 3 to 4 years old story... now as many people has access to internet now I guess they just download it....

Previously people used to buy audio cd's specially to listen in the cars... but after the introduction of 4-5 music radio station... people just gave up buying cds... as the radio stations continuously play all the hit and latest album... not sure whether they give any royalty to the singers or not...

N regarding movie... different dish service provider play all the movies for free... english... hindi and bangla... so also no need to buy dvds..

Due to all these current artists earn most of their earning through different show or concert or by appearing to different tv channel as the number of tv channel in bangladesh is on the rise...

I believe same thing is also happening in India....

Regarding book Nilkheet of dhaka is the best place... you can find all the photocopy of engineering, medical, finance, management or law book in between 100 to 200 tk where as real book cost 5000-12000 tk..

Hope you have got the answer...
 
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This is a very sad story. I feel guilty of pirating Music too. Although I always avoided pirating local artists, specially Indian Classical artists.
 
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This is a very sad story. I feel guilty of pirating Music too. Although I always avoided pirating local artists, specially Indian Classical artists.


Try this new service by Google India Discover Music. You can listen to songs free of charge

The collection is limited to Hindi songs though (at the moment)
 
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This is a very sad story. I feel guilty of pirating Music too. Although I always avoided pirating local artists, specially Indian Classical artists.

Whats about all the site from where 100s of thousands sub continental people are downloading.. music, movie, software, books etc... n I regret to say that these are the websites which has also become an por-n hub and to upload all the deshi scandal on a regular basis... n destroying the moral of the youth and causing fatal problem for the victims ... especially the girls..
 
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Ohh I forgot to mention... 1 important thing.... credit card is not readily available in Bangladesh... only in some cases people get debit card... thats of no use to purchase from online... n more on that 1 can not buy anything from internet specially if it is out side of bd... due to strict policy of government for money laundering... n very few people specially the working class can get credit card... n in some cases if parents want they can provide a sub credit card to their children... which is directly connected with their credit card... so no place for itunes or any other online music seller over here... as no body will be able to purchase them and they do not have the credit card to do so...
 
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