ELSPA Raid Nets 85,000 Discs

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
ELSPA Raid Nets 85,000 Discs


The Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association's [http://www.elspa.com/] Anti-Piracy Unit netted an 85,000-disc haul during a raid on a market in East Yorkshire in the U.K.

Part of the confiscated goods included discs marked "Volume 9 DS Games," which contained illegal copies of games for the Nintendo DS [http://www.nintendo.com/ds]system. According to ELSPA forensic experts, the discs had been appearing for roughly four to six weeks, but these were the first ones discovered in the U.K. The discs contain approximately 200 "current" games for the DS system, with a retail value estimated at ₤6000 ($11,800).

An increase in counterfeit goods at the Walton Street market in Hull led to the raid, which was conducted by officers of the Hull CID, Hull Trading Standards, the Riverside Neighborhood Patrol Team, the ELSPA IP Crime Unit, the Mechanical Copyright Protection Agency and representatives from Nike [http://www.adidas.com/]. "A number of people" were interviewed by Trading Standards officers following the raid, which targeted illegally copied music and counterfeit clothing as well as pirated software.

"Piracy costs the games industry dearly - just like that of any other entertainment industry," said John Hillier, chief of the ELSPA's crime unit. "Making good and inventive games is an expensive and creative process, with some titles today costing ₤20 million ($39.4 million) or more to develop. To make a quality title involves teams of highly skilled professionals, from programmers and graphic artists to voice actors and musicians. When a pirate sells illegally copied games they undermine the viability of our industry. The worst-case scenario is that pirate activity could cost the jobs of some of the creative talent and that would be a catastrophe."

Trading Standards officer Mike Pindar said, "Local traders have gone out of business as a result of these counterfeiters and people who buy from them. The people who lose out are the retailers and the public. We're going to be very active on counterfeiting and it is only a matter of time before these people receive a visit from the police and ourselves."

"We have made big inroads into the market now and it is our intention to keep raiding it," added Detective Sergeant Reed of the Hull CID. "We're going to meet with Trading Standards and see whether we can make this a regular thing."


Permalink
 

Melaisis

New member
Dec 9, 2007
1,014
0
0
Interestingly, the original writers of this article got it wrong: There's actually no place called 'East Yorkshire' in Britain. 'East Riding and the Humber' is probably more accurate, or perhaps just Hull? I mean, there is unofficially, but its just an odd error to come from a governmental press release.

Bootlegged DVDs, games and clothing is all over the market and car-boot circuits in England, especially in the north where such events seem to be exceedingly popular. We could all claim that this is just another step forward by The Man to oppress us. Still, I know many people who own or at least manage gaming stores in Leeds and York (West and North Yorkshire respectively). This sort of thing damages business greatly, and is probably one of the reasons why prices are rising. As long as these raids are committed on behalf of the industry as a whole (and not just to OPREZZ DA PPL!), then they're more than welcomed to keep at it.