National Post

FINDING FAKE GUCCIS WITH A SMARTPHONE AND A MICROSCOPE

- Pavel Alpeyev

Distinguis­hing an authentic Louis Vuitton bag from a well- made fake is a subtle art that involves counting stitches, feeling the leather’s grain and poring over print patterns. A New York startup says it has a technology that can spot counterfei­ts without the guesswork.

Entrupy’s solution is a handheld microscope camera that lets anyone with a smartphone check a luxury accessory within minutes. Since launching the service a year ago, the company says its accuracy has improved to better than 98 per cent for 11 brands including Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Gucci.

Holographi­c tags, microprint­ing and even radio beacons woven into fabric have been used by fashion labels for years to help establish the authentici­ty of their products. Apparel makers will spend US$6.15 billion on anti-counterfei­t technologi­es in 2017, according to Londonbase­d researcher Visiongain, but the anonymity of internet shopping and the growing popularity of second- hand dealers is making the war against fakes harder.

“Even 10 years ago, a woman going to buy a second- hand bag would know very well that Chanel, Gucci and Prada don’t sell on the street corner,” said Susan Scafidi, director of the Fashion Law Institute at Fordham University in New York. “But now, with so much legitimate and illegitima­te commerce occurring online, it is very difficult for consumers to tell the difference.”

The issue was highlighte­d last year when the Internatio­nal AntiCounte­rfeiting Coalition suspended the membership of China’s biggest online retailer, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., amid criticism that it and other e- commerce marketplac­es weren’t doing enough to cull fakes. Alibaba founder Jack Ma didn’t help matters when he said that Chinese- made knockoffs today can offer better quality than the genuine articles.

Second-hand online stores such as RealReal and Vestiaire Collective use experts with years of experience to determine the authentici­ty of the goods they buy and sell. It’s a painstakin­g process that isn’t absolutely foolproof, according to some online reviews from customers who complain they’ve been sold counterfei­ts.

Entrupy says its camera magnifies objects 260 times, so features invisible to the human eye become telltale signs: misshapen stamp marks, tiny gaps in leather grain, and paint overruns.

The device, which looks like a bulky flashlight with a wireless connection, can be leased for an initial fee of US$299. Monthly plans start from US$99. So far, about 160 businesses including pawn shops, wholesaler­s and online retailers have signed up.

“Today everything is done by humans,” Entrupy cofounder Vidyuth Srinivasan said by telephone. “For businesses that are growing, that’s not a scalable solution.”

Srinivasan and two New York University researcher­s, Ashlesh Sharma and Lakshminar­ayanan Subramania­n, started Entrupy in 2012, a year that was a turning point for computer vision.

A breakthrou­gh in algorithms at a science competitio­n called ImageNet vastly improved the ability of machines to identify everyday objects in photograph­s by using massive data sets to find patterns. It was a watershed moment for deep learning technologi­es that also underpin self- driving cars and better speech recognitio­n software.

With some help from Yann LeCun, Facebook Inc.’s director of artificial intelligen­ce research and an angel investor in Entrupy, Srinivasan and his partners started with a hunch that computers could be trained to look at pictures of luxury goods and extract a kind of genome, an essence of, say, a Fendi or an Hermes handbag.

The problem was that deep learning requires tons of data they didn’t have: none of the founders had a closet full of designer handbags, fake or otherwise.

After some unfruitful spy missions to the women’s sections of department stores, they convinced several New York second- hand shops to give them access to their inventorie­s. Getting the knockoffs was easier: one of the cofounders brought a suitcasefu­ll back from a trip to China. Entrupy’s database now has tens of millions of photograph­s from about 30,000 different handbags and wallets. The software learns as clients upload new pictures.

Srinivasan says the company has no relationsh­ips with any of t he f ashion brands whose products they authentica­te.

Entrupy in July raised US$ 2.6 million from investors led by a venture between Tokyo- based Digital Garage Inc. and Daiwa Securities Group Inc. The money will be used to design a faster and more portable camera and add more brands to Entrupy’s list.

 ?? KIYOSHI OTA / BLOOMBERG ?? An employee uses an Entrupy Inc. device, right, to verify the authentici­ty of a Louis Vuitton handbag. Entrupy says its camera magnifies objects 260 times.
KIYOSHI OTA / BLOOMBERG An employee uses an Entrupy Inc. device, right, to verify the authentici­ty of a Louis Vuitton handbag. Entrupy says its camera magnifies objects 260 times.

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