@Jason FX
You're partly right. Many ideas are easier to copy. And there is no point in re-inventing the wheel when it originally had to fit with the standard of western sourced goods anyway, so simply follow and tweak the established format - "copying" if you insist. Which is essentially the first step towards real innovation. You don't just innovate out of thin air. While the Chinese still copy, they were already highly innovative in several ways to begin with. Their factories for example are top of the line. It's not just about what you make, but innovations in process and manufacturing facilities. That's why the real things (not just the copies) are often also manufactured in same place. It takes much more than "copy" to become successful. When a copycat takes a marker by its horn, it means they have done a better job: despite being late, they attracted customers.
I brought up those inventions because they are key advances throughout history that were created by China that have been replicated by the rest of the world. You don't hear the Chinese complaining about plagiarizing. Whereas the West has been stealing and copying from China and the rest of the world for over thousands of years to further their economies. Then they so conveniently exempted themselves from paying monetary compensation under their arbitrary Colonial "law".
From silkworms to tea/India, until the late Qing dynasty, the West was still in an inferior trade position with their demand for Chinese products like tea and porcelain being well known. Eventually they ended up compensating with barbarism and drugging China at gun point with the Opium Wars. Hilariously, the West is perpetually in an inferior trade imbalance position. In the past, it was due to strong demand for expensive Chinese products with no reciprocal demand for western products. Today, even when China is labelled with low quality and cheap products, the West STILL suffers from a trade imbalance.
Moreover, the US supported a nation-wide policy of intellectual theft and sheltered the 20th century's two most hated war criminals (Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan) in order to gain technology that was paid for by the blood of thousands of horrifically tortured and murdered victims – while preaching breathlessly about international law, innovation, freedom, and justice.
Unmistakably the concept of fairness is very vague, for almost every power has copied from other powers. Hence it isn't a useful yardstick. Which is why the moral implication that you are so eagerly trying to insinuate here is not tenable at all, because our history has a tendency of repeating itself. Hate to break it to you but I'm afraid nothing that is happening right now is anything new under the sun.
In this day and age, a more stark reality is not that certain western parties won't follow suit, but that they can't because they lack the necessary skills to achieve the feat. In other words, they're just a bunch of fearful sitting ducks quacking away IP this and copyright that. And rightfully intimidated they should be, because the Chinese economy is displaying an astonishingly rapid and consistent growth and are well projected to surpass the West due to the sheer number of their population and capital. Case in point, the seven fastest supercomputers in the world today are "Made in China". The number one fastest supercomputer uses Chinese R&D chips, not imported.
No, I'm not a wumao, I simply believe in certain Chinese spirit of things. Perhaps you really are more enlightened on the subject matter than I am, since you're the one claiming to be a Chinese American immigrant who's thoroughly worked the inside layers of your industry.