Key facts
- Japan is considering establishing an organization to help its content industry pursue overseas copyright infringement cases.
- The initiative is aimed at supporting companies and creators who lack the financial resources for international legal battles.
- The move is intended to strengthen the Japanese content industry's global strategy.
The Japanese government is planning to establish an organization to assist domestic companies and creators in addressing intellectual property infringement complaints from abroad. This move is designed to bolster the Japanese content industry's overseas strategy, particularly for those entities that lack the financial resources to pursue legal action independently.
Japanese copyright law, which aligns with international regulations like the Berne Convention, protects a wide range of works including literary, musical, artistic, and computer programming works. The law provides authors with rights such as divulgence, authorship, integrity, and reproduction. While moral rights are non-transferable, their exercise can be waived by contract. The copyright term in Japan has been extended to 70 years for most works, aligning with international trade agreements.
