The Chinese government is to create a unified karaoke system to
block public access to "unhealthy songs" and stop the infringement
of intellectual property rights, a cultural official said
Wednesday.
"The system contains a list of songs that are copyright approved
and it can record how many times a song is ordered, indicating how
much copyright-holders should be paid," said Liang Gang, the
official with the Ministry of Culture.
Every song will be legally authorized and in line with "relevant
standards", he said.
The system, due to go into trial operations in karaoke bars in
Wuhan, Zhengzhou and Qingdao this year, will protect the rights of
copyright holders, Liang said.
Karaoke service has increasingly triggered disputes between
copyright holders and bar operators for copyright infringement
since it caught on in China in the mid-1980s.
"Strictly speaking, no karaoke bar gets songs legally now in
China. It's impossible for a single bar to obtain the copyright of
all songs," the official said.
Each bar would be connected to the system without charge, but
operators would be charged for each song downloaded, he added.
Liang said, karaoke is spreading some "overseas songs with
unhealthy content" in China as well as enriching the lives of
Chinese people. He did not provide an example of a song with
"unhealthy content."
The system is aimed at strengthening the administration of
karaoke parlors and benefiting every sector of the music recording
industry, the official said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 19, 2006)