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Thursday, October 31, 2024

Piracy: Nigerian Copyright Commission to register publishers, booksellers

The Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) says it will roll out the minimum documentation required for booksellers to curb piracy in the country

• October 31, 2024
Textbooks used to illustrate the story
Textbooks used to illustrate the story [Photo: advancetitan]

The Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) says it will roll out the minimum documentation required for booksellers to curb piracy in the country.

John Asein, NCC’s director-general, disclosed in an interview with journalists that the documentation exercise, which has already begun in Abuja, would be spread across other states.

The NCC boss added that the commission was working to make the online registration for booksellers seamless and easy.

According to him, as soon as NCC rolls out the regulation, it becomes mandatory for all the booksellers in the country.

“I am hoping we can achieve this at the beginning of next year. So that, as we approach the next book season, we will have rolled out some of these initiatives.

“Every printer, publisher and bookseller in the market must meet our minimum demands,” he said.

The NCC boss further disclosed that the commission had opened the pathway for the anti-piracy devices, adding that the rollout regulation would be backed up with the hologram.

“We are going to take it in phases. We will start with the purely voluntary scale and determine which books may require compulsory use of the hologram.

“The commission has different models, which we are already discussing with the publishers. NCC will procure and give the holograms to the publishers,” he explained.

Mr Asein stated that there would be a uniform format that would be well-tracked, stressing that any hologram out there would be well-documented in their records.

“Through this, we will be able to follow up in the market and make the job of the copyright officers easier, as well as fighting against piracy more effectively,” he said.

The director general appealed to those engaged in piracy to desist from it, stressing that it kills, steals and destroys other people’s work.

“As a matter of fact, piracy kills creativity. We know authors who have resigned from the business of authorship because of pirates.

“There is no better time for everyone to fight against piracy because we cannot sustain the creative economy if we keep allowing people to steal from that economy,” he stated.

(NAN)

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