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Viewing cable 10TAIPEI178, Taiwan IPR: 2010 301 Watch List Submission

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10TAIPEI178 2010-02-22 10:00 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY American Institute Taiwan, Taipei
VZCZCXRO9466
PP RUEHCN RUEHGH
DE RUEHIN #0178/01 0531000
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 221000Z FEB 10
FM AIT TAIPEI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3352
INFO RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 07 TAIPEI 000178 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
STATE FOR EAP/RSP/TC, EAP/EP 
STATE PLEASE PASS USTR 
USTR FOR RAGLAND AND ALTBACH 
USDOC FOR 4430/ITA/MAC/AP/OPB/TAIWAN 
USDOC ALSO FOR ITA/MAC/OIPR 
USDOC FOR USPTO GIN, BROWNING, AND SNYDOR 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ECON ETRD KIPR TW
SUBJECT:  Taiwan IPR: 2010 301 Watch List Submission 
 
REFTEL: 
 
A) 2008 Taipei 49 
B) 2008 Taipei 1655 
C) Taipei 17 
D) 2009 Taipei 26 
E) 2007 Taipei 2442 
F) 2007 Taipei 2498 
G) 2009 Taipei 249 
H) 2007 Taipei 2529 
I) 2007 Taipei 2595 
J) 2007 Taipei 2005 
 
Overall Assessment: No Watch List for Taiwan 
------------------- ------------------------ 
 
1. (SBU) The Taiwan authorities continued to strengthen intellectual 
property rights (IPR) enforcement over the past 12 months. The 
specialized IP Court, which began accepting cases in July 2008, 
adjudicated 1007 cases in 2009.  The Legislative Yuan (LY) passed 
ISP-related amendments to the Copyright Law that clarify ISPs' 
responsibilities to protect copyrighted materials, limit an ISP's 
liability if the provider quickly removed IPR-infringing material, 
and allow ISPs to terminate or limit service for users who ignore 
three notices of infringement from the ISP.  The Ministry of 
Education (MOE) took further steps to reduce electronic piracy on 
Taiwan's campuses, and schools continue to track and punish 
violations.  The Taiwan Intellectual Property Office (TIPO) 
submitted to the LY an amended Patent Act that would track more 
closely with international standards for issuance of compulsory 
licenses, extend the protection period on pharmaceuticals whose 
entry into the market is slowed by approval delays, and increase 
compensation to license-holders for licensing violations. The LY, 
however, did not act on the bill before the end of the 2009 session. 
 
 
2. (SBU) However, problems remain.  Although physical copying of 
movies and music continued a decade-long fall, digital piracy of 
music, movies, and software continues to be a problem.  Although 
Taiwan's software piracy rate dropped slightly to 39 percent--the 
third-best in Asia behind Japan and Singapore--some software 
companies' representatives believe that the actual rate is 
significantly higher. Rights holders continue to cite Taiwan Customs 
as a weak link in Taiwan's improving efforts against piracy. 
 
3. (SBU) Overall, due to Taiwan's steadily improving IPR 
environment, AIT thinks Taiwan should not be included on the 2010 
Watch List.  In 2010, we will encourage Taiwan to enforce 
newly-enacted Copyright Act amendments, pass amendments to the 
Patent Act that address industry concerns on compulsory licensing, 
and continue to combat digital and textbook piracy on university 
campuses.  End overall assessment. 
 
----------------------- 
Ongoing Areas of Review 
----------------------- 
 
Notorious Markets 
----------------- 
 
4. (SBU) Piracy in Taiwan's night markets has continued a 
decade-long decline, and there are no "notorious" physical markets. 
According to the Recording Industry Foundation in Taiwan (RIT), 
which represents the international recording industry, only 
Hsin-Ming night market in Taoyuan County is notable for piracy, with 
three to five stalls selling illegal music and DVDs. 
 
Optical Media 
------------- 
 
5. (SBU) According to RIT and the Taiwan Foundation Against Optical 
Theft (TFACT, the local arm of the Motion Picture Association), 
optical disc piracy is no longer a major problem in Taiwan.  RIT 
figures show that as legitimate CD sales in Taiwan have dropped by 
half since 2005, the percentage of pirated copies has dropped from 
almost 40 percent to a steady 22 percent over the past three years, 
a drop RIT attributes to the popularity of digital piracy. TFACT 
thinks pirated movies have shown a similar decline. 
 
6. (SBU) RIT estimates there are no more than 20 physical outlets 
island-wide for pirated CDs--most of which are night market 
stalls--down from about 30 in 2007 and 250 a decade ago. Other 
rights holder groups agree that large-scale production and 
 
TAIPEI 00000178  002 OF 007 
 
 
distribution of physically-pirated goods is declining. 
 
7. (SBU) According to RIT, the Taiwan police initiated 105 
music-related physical piracy cases in Taiwan in 2009, up from 90 in 
2008, but lower than 136 and 227 cases in 2007 and 2006, 
respectively. Rights holder groups believe that most domestic 
physical movie counterfeiting is now smaller-scale burning of 
counterfeit DVDs on home computers, with the majority of pirated 
DVDs coming from the PRC and other overseas mail-order sites that 
take orders over the Internet and deliver physical copies by mail. 
 
Digital Piracy 
-------------- 
 
8. (SBU) Digital piracy of music and movies is the number one 
concern in Taiwan for movie and music industry groups. Industry 
statistics, however, show rights holders are becoming more effective 
at enforcing intellectual property rights. In 2009, RIT sent over 
1000 takedown letters asking major Internet service providers (ISPs) 
and auction sites to remove unauthorized music content. According to 
RIT, 98 percent of allegedly unauthorized files were removed, up 
from 91 percent in 2008, and only 80 percent in 2006 and 2007.  The 
local office of the Business Software Alliance (BSA) reports that in 
2009, notified ISPs removed unauthorized content in "almost 100 
percent" of cases. TFACT figures show a take-down success rate of 82 
percent. 
 
9. (SBU) Digital piracy prosecutions are also dropping fast:  Taiwan 
prosecuted 73 music-related digital piracy cases in 2009, down from 
122 in 2008 and 265 in 2007.  RIT's Alex Chen attributes the drop to 
more successful notice-and-takedown efforts by the recording 
industry, a greater awareness of intellectual property among the 
general public, and the increasing availability of legitimate music 
online. Chen noted, however, that RIT does not believe digital 
piracy itself is dropping, only that industry is getting better at 
identifying and taking action against websites hosting copyrighted 
material. 
 
10. (SBU) Taiwan took steps in 2009 to improve its ISP-related 
legislative framework. In April 2009, the Legislative Yuan (LY) 
passed amendments to the Copyright Act that clarify ISP's 
responsibilities to protect copyrighted materials, limit an ISPs' 
liability if the provider quickly removed IPR-infringing material, 
and allow 
ISPs to terminate or limit service for users who ignore three 
notices of infringement from the ISP.  Taiwan became the second 
jurisdiction in the world to codify such a "three-strikes" measure. 
Unfortunately, the law's implementing regulations, which TIPO 
finalized in November, did not detail how ISPs should define "three 
strikes." Enforcement of the new law will therefore be uneven across 
ISP providers. 
 
Digital Piracy - Peer-to-peer 
----------------------------- 
 
11. (SBU) In June 2007, Taiwan passed legislation providing a legal 
basis for prosecuting online peer-to-peer platforms whose service 
allows for the exchange of IPR-infringing materials, and by the end 
of 2007, the authorities had shut down the two largest P2P service 
providers in Taiwan (ref A). In 2008, the MOE issued increasingly 
strict Internet guidance to universities, including new rules 
forbidding all peer-to-peer (P2P) software use except with explicit 
permission, requiring daily bandwidth limits, and monitoring 
download volume per student (ref B). 
 
12. (SBU) In November 2009, in response to rights holder complaints 
that P2P violations still occur in student dormitories that use 
non-TANet, commercial ISPs, the MOE agreed to add an administrative 
rule requiring universities to ban the use of P2P software on 
commercial ISPs in university dormitories (ref C). 
 
Software, Including Use and Procurement by Authorities 
------------------------ ----------------------------- 
 
13. (SBU) According to the latest BSA surveys, 39 percent of 
member-company software used in Taiwan in 2008 was unauthorized. 
This is a one percentage-point drop from the 2007 figure, and places 
Taiwan third-best in Asia--behind only Japan and Singapore--and 23rd 
worldwide. 
 
14. (SBU) The true picture of software piracy is likely worse, 
however (ref D).  In a recent meeting, BSA's Taiwan representative 
told econoff that BSA's survey methodology undercounts the level of 
 
TAIPEI 00000178  003 OF 007 
 
 
unauthorized use, including illegal copies, expired licenses, and 
under-reporting of licensed users.  Software company representatives 
privately estimate to us that 70 to 90 percent of business software 
in Taiwan is unauthorized.  According to rights holders, such 
unauthorized use of software is common not only in the business 
community, but also on university campuses and within official 
agencies. 
 
TRIPS Compliance and Other IPR Issues 
------------------------------------- 
 
15. (SBU) In January 2008, the EU completed a Trade Barriers 
Regulation (TBR) investigation into Taiwan's 2006 decision to issue 
a compulsory license (CL) to local company Gigastorage to produce 
CDs using Philips' licensed technology (ref E).  The EU report 
concluded Taiwan's Patent Law is inconsistent with WTO rules on 
intellectual property, and recommended that the European Commission 
start WTO proceedings if Taiwan did not take concrete steps to amend 
its Patent Law within two months. 
 
16. (SBU) In response, TIPO drafted amendments to the Patent Act, 
and in early December, the Executive Yuan (EY) approved the 
amendments and passed them on to the legislature.  The amended Act 
would bring Taiwan's CL regulations closer to international 
standards, strengthen patent protection on animals and plants for 
bio-tech development, extend the protection period--for up to five 
years--on pharmaceuticals whose entry into the market is slowed by 
Taiwan authority approval delays, and more clearly spell out 
compensation formulae for licensing violations. 
 
17. (SBU) AIT contacts at Philips recently told us the amended texts 
are satisfactory, a view that the Deputy Head of the European 
Economic and Trade Office in Taiwan echoed to econoff in January. 
The LY, however, was unable to pass the amendments before its autumn 
session ended in January 2010.  TIPO's Deputy Director General, 
Margaret Chen, recently told econoff that the LY would "certainly" 
take up the amendments again in the spring session, and will likely 
pass them. 
 
Data Protection 
--------------- 
 
18. (U) Taiwan has three laws that cover data protection: the 
Personal Data Protection Law, the Trade Secrets Act, and the 
Integrated Circuit Layout Protection Act.  AIT has heard no 
complaints from industry about problems with data protection in 
Taiwan. 
 
Data Protection - Pharmaceuticals 
--------------------------------- 
 
19. (U) To satisfy TRIPS Article 39.3, in January 2005, Taiwan 
revised the Pharmaceutical Affairs Law to provide for five years of 
data protection in order to prevent unfair commercial use of test 
data submitted by pharmaceutical companies for marketing approval 
from regulatory authorities.  In early December 2009, the EY 
approved proposed amendments to the Patent Act that would extend 
this protection period up to five more years if the Taiwan 
regulatory process delays a patented medicine's entry onto the 
market. According to TIPO, the LY will consider the amendment in the 
spring legislative session. 
 
20. (U) The current Law allows competitors to refer to the 
originators' data and submit generic filings three years after the 
originator gains market approval, and requires drug companies to 
register a new product in Taiwan within three years of the product's 
release in an advanced-country market. 
 
21 (SBU) However, the Law only covers new chemical entity products, 
and not new indications for previously-developed drugs.  In 
addition, the Law limits the applicability of data protection to 
registrations filed within three years--from the first approval 
granted anywhere in the world--for a product based on that new 
chemical entity, which industry claims is inconsistent with the 
objectives of TRIPS data protection rights, and may not effectively 
prohibit premature commercial use, especially for new indications of 
older drugs. 
 
Data Protection - Patent Linkage 
-------------------------------- 
 
22. (SBU) Taiwan has not yet established patent linkage in the 
regulatory procedures for approving generics (ref F), which means 
 
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that a generic drug can get drug marketing approval from the Taiwan 
Department of Health and a reimbursement price from the Bureau of 
National Health Insurance before the original drug's patent has 
expired. 
 
23. (SBU) Under a 2005 revision to the Pharmaceutical Affairs Law, 
the Taiwan authorities require patent-owners to register a drug's 
patents when the patent-owners receive the product license in 
Taiwan. Therefore, data similar to that submitted in the "Orange 
Book" system in the United States is available to the Taiwan 
authorities.  However, Taiwan has no plans to implement a U.S.-style 
patent linkage system. 
 
Production, Import, and Export of Counterfeit Goods 
--------------------------------- ----------------- 
 
24. (SBU) Most large-scale pirating of optical media, software, and 
clothing has shifted to other locations in Asia.  Over the past 
decade, enforcement authorities have increased the frequency and 
effectiveness of raids against night markets and large-scale optical 
media factories, significantly reducing the number of pirated 
products for retail sale.  In response, IP pirates have shifted from 
large optical media plants to small, custom optical-media burning 
operations, often for home delivery and sale over the Internet, or 
have shifted production overseas. 
 
25. (SBU) Infringement of trademarked goods, such as cigarettes, 
clothing, handbags, watches, and footwear, is also an area of 
concern in Taiwan. In 2009, infringement-related cases and arrests 
both rose from the previous year: police filed 1040 cases last year, 
a 19.13 percent jump from 2008, and arrested 1,180 suspects, up 
23.17 percent from 2008.  The jump may, however, simply be a return 
to previous levels, because 2008 cases and arrests were down 27 
percent and 25 percent from 2007, respectively. 
 
26. (U) Taiwan Customs reported that the number of seizures of 
counterfeit branded goods increased in 2009 to 270 cases from 226 
cases in 2008. There were 300 seizures in 2007. Taiwan Customs 
impounded 1,215,282 items in 2009, compared to 1,104,557 items in 
2008, and 4,446,506 items in 2007.  As in 2008, counterfeit 
cigarettes accounted for 85 percent of seized goods, with clothes 
and medicines making up three percent each, and auto parts, 
footwear, and leather products for about one percent each or less. 
 
27. (U) In 2009, Taiwan Customs recorded only three cases of export 
commodities found to infringe trademarks--down from four cases in 
2008--although the 102,672 trademark-violating individual goods 
seized in the 2009 cases were a 78-percent increase from the 57,626 
items seized in 2008. 
 
28. (U) Under its Optical Disk Law, Taiwan routinely inspects 
exports of disks and disk-manufacturing equipment.  In 2009, Customs 
found only 15 illegal export cases involving optical disks--down 
from 31 cases in 2008--none of which were disks suspected of 
violating copyrights.  Instead, all 15 cases involved false 
declarations of export quantity. 
 
29. (SBU) Original-drug manufacturers remain concerned about 
counterfeit drugs, but for the third year in a row, the AmCham 
Pharmaceutical Committee's annual policy priority paper ranked the 
issue last in importance, below other IPR issues such as patent 
linkage and data exclusivity. 
 
Enforcement: Police and Courts Good, Sentences Still Light 
------------ ----------------------- --------------------- 
 
30. (U) Taiwan's Joint Optical Disk Enforcement (JODE) Task Force 
conducted 820 inspections of optical disk manufacturers in 
2009--over half during non-work hours--and found only two violations 
of Taiwan law. Similar raids in 2006, 2007, and 2008 found no 
violations of Taiwan law. 
 
31. (SBU) Continuing a recent downward trend (ref G), in 2009, the 
IPR Police conducted 16.48 percent fewer raids (5241 in total) than 
in 2008, and began 5.5 percent fewer infringement cases. Arrests, 
however, were down less than one percent, suggesting the police have 
improved targeting. 
 
32. (U) Seizures of counterfeit goods declined in all major 
categories from 2008 to 2009, with pirated music, movie, and 
software/video-game disk seizures down 17.8 percent, 11.2 percent, 
and 19 percent, respectively. These numbers reflect the increasingly 
digital nature of piracy in Taiwan. 
 
TAIPEI 00000178  005 OF 007 
 
 
 
33. (SBU) As in previous years, very few successful IPR-related 
prosecutions result in jail time for violators. In 2009, Taiwan 
courts handed down 29 percent fewer sentences for IPR-related crimes 
(1,768) than in 2008 (2,497).  As in 2008, the vast majority--92 
percent--of cases in 2009 resulted in a fine or a jail term of six 
months or less. [Note: In Taiwan, jail terms of six months or less 
are almost automatically converted into fines.  End note.] 
 
34. (SBU) The long-awaited specialized IP Court started accepting 
cases in July 2008 (ref F), and by year's end had received 694 
cases. In 2009, the IP Court handled 1878 cases, and closed out 
1364. The Court accepts first-instance and appeals civil and 
administrative cases, as well as criminal case appeals. AIT industry 
and Ministry of Justice (MOJ) contacts have praised the Court for 
its knowledgeable experts, and note the IP Court is handling cases 
faster than non-specialized courts (ref D). 
 
Enforcement: Customs 
-------------------- 
 
35. (SBU) Movie, music, and software rights holders--along with 
pharmaceutical companies--continue to complain that Taiwan Customs 
is a weak link in Taiwan's relatively good efforts against piracy 
(ref D).  Industry representatives tell us pharmaceuticals, music, 
and movies are commonly sent to Taiwan by mail-order in small 
batches--the majority from China, but also from South East Asia--but 
Customs officials do not seem willing to spend time seizing these 
smaller quantities of counterfeits. Rights holders attribute this 
reluctance to Customs officers wanting to avoid the large amount of 
paper work required for even relatively small seizures, as well as a 
lack of manpower available for follow-up investigations. 
 
36. (SBU) Changes to the copyright law in 2004 allowed for ex 
officio inspections by Taiwan Customs, but the law requires rights 
holders to verify within a short period that the seized materials 
are counterfeit.  Although TFACT and other rights holders report to 
us that they routinely send personnel to Taoyuan International 
Airport and other ports of entry to verify the authenticity of 
suspect parcels, Customs tells us some rights holders are not 
responsive to requests to verify suspect trademark violations. 
 
37. (SBU) AmCham Taipei's IPR Committee also considers Customs 
enforcement relatively weak.  The Committee's 2010 draft White Paper 
on IPR issues recommends Taiwan broaden and streamline Customs 
inspection and seizures. AmCham calls for: 
 
--A more organized, speedy, and transparent system for investigating 
and prosecuting suspected importers of counterfeit or smuggled 
goods. 
--More disclosure of information related to Customs seizures, 
including basic information on importers and exporters. 
--A database of fined, convicted, and/or suspected importers of 
counterfeit and smuggled goods that could be shared, monitored, and 
added to by Customs, the Judicial Yuan, the Taiwan Intellectual 
Property Office (TIPO), the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of 
Interior, and the Ministry of Finance. 
--More training for Customs officials on recognizing counterfeit and 
smuggled goods. 
--An online database of trademarks, copyrights, and 
brands--including images of trademarks and brands, contact 
information of rights holders, countries of production, and 
licensees--available to Customs personnel as they inspect shipments 
at the ports of entry. 
--Increased inspections of postal and express mail service 
packages. 
 
Campus Anti-Piracy Efforts 
-------------------------- 
 
38. (SBU) In early 2007, the Ministry of Education (MOE) started a 
three-year Campus IP Action Plan to combat IPR violations at 
Taiwan's universities (ref H).  Under the Plan, the MOE maintains 
IPR-related requirements and targets for Taiwan universities, and 
publicly grades each university's performance on numerous metrics in 
order to promote best practices and shame less successful schools 
into taking more action. In 2008, the MOE issued increasingly strict 
guidance for the Taiwan Academic Network (TANet), the Ministry's 
island-wide high-school and university intranet, including new rules 
forbidding all peer-to-peer (P2P) software use except with explicit 
permission, requiring daily bandwidth limits, and monitoring 
download volume per student (ref D). 
 
 
TAIPEI 00000178  006 OF 007 
 
 
39. (SBU) The Plan--originally intended to run for three years to 
end-2009--led universities to take tangible steps to deal more 
seriously with IPR protection, especially in combating unauthorized 
file-sharing on TANet (refs B, D, and I). The MOE, encouraged by 
schools' improvements under the Plan and spurred by continual U.S. 
engagement, decided in November 2009 to continue with the Plan 
indefinitely. 
 
Campus Anti-Piracy Efforts - Textbooks 
-------------------------------------- 
 
40. (SBU) The Action Plan also targets illegal textbook copying. 
Taiwan university administrators tell us that under the Plan, 
on-campus copying of textbooks has become less rampant and less 
visible in Taiwan year on year, especially at on-campus copy shops. 
They also report off-campus copy shops are either more reluctant to 
copy textbooks in whole or in part, or have begun to refuse to copy 
more than a few pages of any one book (ref B). 
 
41. (SBU) The Taiwan Book Publishers' Association (TBPA), however, 
continues to complain that the situation has not improved, but has 
merely gone underground.  According to TBPA's chairwoman, off-campus 
copy shops still take orders through representatives on campus and 
standing student relationships, then deliver books directly to 
customers. 
TPBA, however, does not have direct evidence to back up the 
organization's claims: in a repeat of results from the three 
preceding years, Police copy-shop raids at the beginning of the 2009 
fall semester failed to turn up significant amounts of violating 
materials. 
 
42. (SBU) To bolster TBPA's claims about widespread textbook piracy, 
the Association asked professors Yu Ching-hsiang and Cheng Yu-ting 
of National Chengchi University to undertake a survey of over a 
thousand students at 20 Taiwan colleges.  According to the survey, 
52 percent of Taiwan college students admit to having photocopied at 
least one entire textbook.  A similar survey in 2007 showed that 
roughly half of college students buy pirated versions of some books 
and supplementary materials (ref J). 
 
Treaties 
-------- 
 
43. (U) Taiwan is not a member of the United Nations and is 
therefore not a signatory to the 1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) or 
the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT). However, Taiwan 
abides by the terms of both treaties. 
 
Sour Note: Collective Management 
-------------------------------- 
 
44. (U) ON January 12, the LY passed amendments to the Copyright Act 
and the Copyright Intermediary Organization Act (now known as the 
Copyright Collective Management Act, or CCMA).   The Copyright Act 
amendments exempt owners of restaurants and other public venues, 
television content providers, and broadcasting stations from 
criminal, though not civil, responsibility for unwittingly 
rebroadcasting materials that violate copyright. 
 
45. (SBU) The amendments to the Copyright Collective Management Act 
(CCMA) allow users to pay a TIPO-determined licensing rate to the 
rights holder if the user and the rights holder's designated 
collective copyright management organization (CMO) are not able to 
reach agreement on a rate.  CCMA amendments mandate a single CMO 
contact window for users, ban rights holders or CMOs from using 
commissioned agents to collect licensing fees, and require rights 
holders to set a single rate for identical content provided through 
different artist management agencies. 
 
46. (SBU)  Music rights holders in Taiwan are not happy about the 
changes.  According to RIT's Lee, removing criminal liabilities for 
rebroadcasting violating works is a step backwards in enforcement. 
Lee agrees it makes sense to set a single licensing window for 
users' convenience, but thinks this should be set up on a volunteer 
basis among CMOs and users.  RIT also fears TIPO-imposed licensing 
rates will be unfairly low, and thinks that, due to the large number 
of potential broadcasting venues in Taiwan--including stores, 
restaurants, schools, karaoke bars, and clubs--rights holders will 
not be able to collect fees efficiently without using commissioned 
agents. 
 
Comment 
------- 
 
TAIPEI 00000178  007 OF 007 
 
 
 
47.  (SBU) Taiwan continues to build on the significant progress 
identified in last year's report, including passing tough new 
ISP-related digital piracy amendments, and indefinitely extending 
the Campus IP Action plan. 
We assess that the Taiwan authorities will continue to support 
effective IPR policies, including efforts to reduce piracy on 
campuses.  In 2010, we will press Taiwan to enforce newly-enacted 
Copyright Act amendments, pass amendments to the Patent Act that 
address industry concerns on compulsory licensing, and continue to 
combat digital and textbook piracy on university campuses. 
 
STANTON