The fight against digital piracy and counterfeit goods has received a boost with the announcement of a £3 million of new government funding to the City of London Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU).
Minister for Intellectual Property (IP), Baroness Neville-Rolfe announced the government’s funding commitment to the national crime unit at the Anti-Counterfeiting Group Conference in London. On 23 October. The unit has now been operating for one year and this new funding will cover the next two years, up to 2017.
Baroness Neville-Rolfe said:
“We’ve seen significant success in PIPCU’s first year of operation. This extra support will help the unit to build on this impressive record in the fight against intellectual property crime, which costs the UK at least £1.3 billion a year in lost profits and taxes.
“With more money now being invested in ideas than factories or machinery in the UK, it is vital that we protect creators and consumers and the UK’s economic growth.
“Government and industry must work together to give long-term support to PIPCU, so that we can strengthen the UK’s response to the blight of piracy and counterfeiters.
City of London Police Commander Steve Head, who is the Police National Coordinator for Economic Crime, said:
“The government committing to fund the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit until 2017 is fantastic news for the City of London Police and the creative industries, and very bad news for those that seek to make capital through intellectual property crime.
Since its launch in September 2013, PIPCU has investigated more than £29 million worth of IP crime and has suspended 2,359 internet domain names; seized more than £1.29 million worth of suspected fake goods; diverted more than five million visits from copyright infringing sites to the PIPCU domain suspension page; and set up Operation Creative, a ground-breaking initiative designed to disrupt and prevent websites from providing unauthorised access to copyrighted content, and the Infringing Website List.