"...IFPI has broken new ground in the fight against piracy in South East
Asia by signing a 'good business practices' anti-piracy agreement with PT
Dynamitra Tarra, the largest CD manufacturer in Indonesia. The agreement
provides a model for the optical disc replication industry throughout the
region, which has the highest levels of pirate optical disc production in
the world.

Dynamitra Tarra has agreed to: implement the IRMA (International Recording
Media Association) Anti-Piracy Compliance Program Standards & Procedures to
help avoid intellectual property (IP) infringements; cooperate fully in all
future IFPI anti-piracy investigations; and give full access to IFPI
representatives in checking compliance with IP rights in the future. In
addition, IFPI welcomes the fact that Dynamitra has also employed an
international consulting agency to help develop security systems designed to
reduce the risk of theft of their clients' proprietary information.

IFPI signs anti-piracy agreement with Indonesian CD plant

Dynamitra Tarra has also pledged its support for IFPI's proposals for
regulation of optical disc plants in Indonesia and across Asia - which IFPI
has been actively lobbying for. Such laws are already in place in the Hong
Kong Special Administrative Region, Macau, and Malaysia. Similar initiatives
are in progress in Taiwan, the Philippines and Thailand.

The agreement reflects IFPI's strategy of increasing cooperation with
optical disc plants to help them avoid piracy. It demonstrates Dynamitra
Tarra's commitment to conducting its business in a legal manner and avoiding
music piracy, which is undermining the health of the optical disc industry
as well as the recording industry.

Geoff Taylor, Deputy General Counsel of IFPI, said: "Optical disc plants can
be part of the solution to music piracy in Asia, rather than part of the
problem. As IFPI and other content industries up their anti-piracy
enforcement, plants in Asia are increasingly being caught up in criminal and
civil proceedings as a result of accepting orders from unscrupulous clients.
Replicators that have entered into anti-piracy agreements of this nature
will avoid these problems and have a distinct competitive advantage in
attracting legitimate business."

IFPI is now inviting other plants in the region to seek similar agreements.
In this way, plants can reduce the likelihood of infringing copyright and
demonstrate to customers and investors their commitment to managing a
successful and legal business in the long term. Irwan HL, Director of
Dynamitra Tarra, said: "If a plant does not have procedures such as the IRMA
Code and IFPI's Good Business Practice Guidelines in place, they are taking
unacceptable business risks even if they believe they have sufficient
protection procedures in place. We have always put great emphasis on
observing IP rights and we fully support IFPI's anti-piracy activities,
which we hope will ensure that the optical disc manufacturing industry
develops in a way that will allow legitimate businesses like Dynamitra Tarra
to flourish."

IFPI spearheads the recording industry's fight against music piracy, which
is a global illegal business worth more than US$4 billion annually.
Anti-piracy agreements such as this one are a key part of IFPI's strategy to
commit the optical disc industry to legitimate manufacturing. There are more
than 700 known CD plants worldwide..."


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