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Ripping Off Good Reads in China
Ripping Off Good Reads in China
SHANGHAI — The five-volume "Executive Ability" book series is a classic in Chinese business and management circles. Collectively, it has sold more than 2 million copies in the last two years. Top universities and public libraries in China keep multiple copies on hand. It's also a big fake. The series purports to be a translation of English-language works, but no such titles exist. The principal author — a Paul Thomas, said to be an eminent Harvard University business professor — is not real. Also made up is the rave review on the back cover, attributed to the Wall Street Journal: "The most practical and advanced management thought of our time." There are many more where these came from. .... Previously, fake books simply were pirated copies of real versions, sold on the streets for a small fraction of bookstore prices. But these days, experts say, scores of business texts in Chinese bookstores make phony claims of origin or authorship. The contents of some are lifted right out of journals and magazines. Others overstate the number of volumes sold or gin up glowing reviews. "There are [bogus] recommendations from Bill Gates, New York Times or even Einstein, which is really ridiculous." .... http://www.latimes.com/business/la-f...99.story?coll= la-home-business ROTFLMAO! |
Li.Changchun wrote:
Ripping Off Good Reads in China SHANGHAI — The five-volume "Executive Ability" book series is a classic in Chinese business and management circles. Collectively, it has sold more than 2 million copies in the last two years. Top universities and public libraries in China keep multiple copies on hand. It's also a big fake. The series purports to be a translation of English-language works, but no such titles exist. The principal author — a Paul Thomas, said to be an eminent Harvard University business professor — is not real. Also made up is the rave review on the back cover, attributed to the Wall Street Journal: "The most practical and advanced management thought of our time." There are many more where these came from. .... Previously, fake books simply were pirated copies of real versions, sold on the streets for a small fraction of bookstore prices. But these days, experts say, scores of business texts in Chinese bookstores make phony claims of origin or authorship. The contents of some are lifted right out of journals and magazines. Others overstate the number of volumes sold or gin up glowing reviews. "There are [bogus] recommendations from Bill Gates, New York Times or even Einstein, which is really ridiculous." .... http://www.latimes.com/business/la-f...99.story?coll= la-home-business ROTFLMAO! Hey, give the Chinese an A for effort. A few years ago a zillion copies were sold of books purporting to tell you how to prepare your child for an American Ivy League university. Usually the only thing that changed was the name of the school, ie "How to Get Your Child Into ****" with **** being Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, etc. Whoever wrote the original book got very rich if he had any business smarts at all. Hey, China is changing, it's becoming capitalist, and soon the only thing left of Communism will be a bunch of empty slogans. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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