(Nov. 10, PDI Entertainment)
By Oliver M. Pulumbarit
“Many Filipinos do not understand that piracy is stealing
and it is a crime,” said Joji Alonso, legal counsel for the Motion Picture
Anti-Film Piracy Council, in her opening remarks at a recent workshop on the
Anti-Camcording Act in Taguig City .
“In 2010, a very important law was passed—Republic Act No.
10088, the Anti-Camcording Act of the Philippines ,”
Alonso noted. “There was a massive change. Our country was lifted off the
international watch list—a small victory for the film industry. Last year, we
were back on that list.”
Through the workshop, Alonso added, she and representatives
of law enforcement agencies and film industry executives hoped to “make the
camcording law a more effective deterrent against movie piracy.”
Another speaker, Police Director Benjamin Magalong of the
Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG), stressed that the event was
aimed at reminding law enforcers and the public of the four-year-old law.
Magalong told the Inquirer that the CIDG worked closely with
the Optical Media Board (OMB) in confiscating pirated video and audio
materials: “There [is deputization]. Our operations are always in conjunction
with the OMB’s. It [is] the lead agency.”
But, he said, “Our enforcement activities with the OMB
involve only confiscation of pirated materials, nothing about camcording.”
He elaborated that such operations have not been as active,
mainly because of the six-month suspension by the Office of the Ombudsman of
OMB Chair Ronnie Ricketts in September for alleged “neglect of duty.”
High-profile, blockbuster movies, ‘X-Men,’ ‘Transformers’
[and] every single locally produced Filipino movie [are targeted],” he said.
“We’ve had great support from the Philippine National Police, OMB and National
Bureau of Investigation. The exhibitors, at their own cost, have increased
security, produced trailers and signposts, and trained their own checkers to
identify potential camcorders.”
Ingram added that the public’s attitude was generally
helpful. “Yes, it’s typically [a few] bad eggs that spoil it for everybody
else.”
In his speech prior to the workshop proper, Metropolitan
Manila Development Authority and Metro Manila Film Festival Chair Francis
Tolentino said the “landmark piece of legislation was hailed as a triumph for
the film industry and a big blow to film piracy.”
However, years after the initial, dramatic decline of
illegal camcording, the same old problem resurfaced, according to Tolentino:
“What went wrong? Ningas-cogon? Were we, perhaps, so elated by early success,
that we became complacent and soon dropped our guard? We must renew our
commitment, collective will and resolve to fight this evil.”
A new trailer that discourages illegal camcording, starring
Derek Ramsey and Kristoffer King, was unveiled at the event.
Copies of a handbook on RA 10088, with details on the law
and corresponding police intervention procedures, were distributed to attendees
and members of the press.
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