Posted on Mar 30, 2014
SGT Suraj Dave
21.8K
18
7
2
2
0
Bf4a8598
<p>Quick question, what exactly makes it legal?</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Don't get me wrong. I was real appreciate for the cheap DVD's, Electronics, bags, eye pro etc... that is sold for cheap during deployments by local nationals... but&nbsp;isn't the FOB/OP/COP count as government property?<br><br>I am just confused as to why Oakley and the Motion Picture Association are alright with the U.S. government allowing local's to sell&nbsp;their counterfeit products. It isn't a secret or anything, its openly done.&nbsp;I find it hard to believe theese companies aren't aware that soldiers are buying counterfeit merchandise with their logo for substantially cheap prices. Why hasn't any of these companies pursued a stop to this? Is there a legal loop hole which makes it OK?<br><br>Again. Super thankful for all the bootleg stuff the Afghans have sold me over my deployments. Just wondering.</p>
Posted in these groups: Imgres Deployment
Avatar feed
Responses: 5
SFC Platoon Sergeant
8
8
0
IDK the legality of it, but from what I have heard the reason that we are allowed to purchase bootleg merchandise on deployment is because the countries we are getting this stuff in don't have copyright laws.  When I went to Iraq, we were allowed to take as much stuff back with us as long as it was only one copy of each item.  It sounded like they were trying to prevent the illegal sale of bootleg products on the American economy, where there are copyright laws.  In Afghanistan, they put a cap on the number of bootleg products we could bring back, but I don't remember what it was.  I just know that there wasn't anything worth getting from Afghanistan compared to Iraq.
(8)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
LTC Program Manager
4
4
0
The problem is economics.  In the US, laws are passed against bootlegging movies and music and the like.  Outside the US, International laws apply but they are harder to pursue offenders.  The big corporations may have to spend a lot of money just to file charges in an international court just to stop some local from selling his products, but they won't break even...costs more to prosecute than the money they would get in return.  Plus when you look at it, most of that stuff breaks or malfunctions after 6 months anyway.  You get what you pay for.  And most of the movies can be downloaded anyway and that's what the corporations are devoting most of their efforts to shutting down since those websites service worldwide vs DVD sellers that are localized.
(4)
Comment
(0)
SGT Suraj Dave
SGT Suraj Dave
>1 y

Sir,

My train of though was any kind of U.S. Military Base, be it COP, FOB, OP, Fort, Camp etc... though it may be inside another country, the base itself is U.S. Property/ part of America. I was wondering why the Motion Picture Association and Oakley and bunches of other companies have not pressured the U.S. Government to not let locals sell their counterfeit merchandise on U.S. property.

 

(0)
Reply
(0)
LtCol George Carlson
LtCol George Carlson
>1 y
The embassy works that way, but military bases do NOT become US property and are simply covered under SOFAs (Status of Forces Agreements, if at all).
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
LCpl Jeff Moore
3
3
0
U.S. customs law actually allows a person to import a limited number of black market good aka counterfeit. Once reason is they are short staffed, the other is no ausa will ever press charges.
(3)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close