Toronto Star

KNOCK IT OFF

Counterfei­ters don’t discrimina­te between big and small businesses,

- DAVID PIERSON LOS ANGELES TIMES

Team Dream is a small business by most any measure.

The quirky cycling apparel brand has just five employees. It produces only about 100 pieces of each garment and operates out of a converted gas station in San Marino, Calif., where a closet-sized nook doubles as both a fulfilment centre and R&D lab.

Its founder, Sean Talkington, has taken in no outside investment and only applied for his first credit card a few years ago because his bank told him he needed one to operate a retail store. “We’re a blip,” Talkington said. So it came as a shock one day to learn that Team Dream clothing was being counterfei­ted and sold on a major Chinese e-commerce site.

Piracy was a problem that befell big brands such as Nike and Adidas, Talkington thought, not upstarts such as Team Dream, which has no advertisin­g budget and got its start selling clothes out of a 1970 Volkswagen bus.

But there it was, a cheaper facsimile of Team Dream’s U.S.-made $135 (U.S.) Thin Stripe Long Sleeve jersey for sale on Taobao, China’s premier online shopping site owned by Alibaba, for about half the price.

The seller, a store named Gentleman Racing Club, made only the slightest changes: removing Team Dream’s chubby bobcat logo and stamping GRC on the back. Its page, which Alibaba removed after talking to the Times, even included one of Team Dream’s Instagram photos of a cyclist wearing the jersey on Hwy. 2 in Angeles National Forest (Gentleman Racing Club did not respond to a request for an interview).

Talkington was initially irked. Sourcing Italian microfleec­e and finding a reliable Southern California manufactur­er are no easy tasks. Irritation then gave way to befuddleme­nt. How much money could anyone make selling phoney Team Dream kit? In the end, Talkington felt almost flattered.

“If you’re getting knocked off, maybe you’ve made it,” said Talkington, who never reported the offending seller to Alibaba. “Maybe if you’re not getting knocked off, you’re not cool enough.”

Just a decade ago, relative anonymity would have shielded a company as small as Team Dream from counter- feiting. But in the era of Instagram and global e-commerce, obscurity is no longer an option — and anyone is fair game.

Team Dream isn’t as big as Rapha — pioneers of the hipster cycling esthetic, who sold their apparel company recently to the Walmart heirs — but it still boasts more than 30,000 Instagram followers. That’s enough to buoy a loyal customer base and, apparently, attract counterfei­ters on the other side of the world.

“Anything to make a buck,” Bruce Foucart, former director of the U.S. government’s National Intellectu­al Property Rights Coordinati­on Center, said of counterfei­ters. “If there’s a niche, they will know about it.”

Small brands often lack the means to tackle counterfei­ters, Foucart added. Even corporate behemoths such as Apple struggle to rein in the black market for its devices in China.

“When you’re a small company, there’s often no recourse,” said Foucart, whose firm, Foucart & Associates, advises businesses on protecting intellectu­al property.

No place is better suited to exploit young brands than China, the origin of 85 per cent of the world’s counterfei­t goods. With its state-of-the-art manufactur­ing infrastruc­ture, Chinese producers can mimic all man- ner of apparel with relative ease. The rise of Chinese e-commerce platforms such as Taobao, AliExpress and DHgate has made finding a counterfei­t item almost as easy as shopping on Amazon.

Chinese counterfei­ters are so savvy, they now produce bespoke replicas of high-end sneakers nearly indistingu­ishable from genuine pairs — and sell them to a fervent customer base on Reddit.

And while mass-market brands continue to be widely copied, so too have smaller trendy labels such as Common Projects and Supreme.

The speed at which goods are knocked off is also increasing. One Israeli entreprene­ur was shocked to learn his phone case that converts into a selfie stick was copied and sold on Alibaba’s AliExpress only a week after he introduced it on Kickstarte­r to seek funding, according to Quartz.

Almost any site or app can serve as a tip sheet for counterfei­ters today, experts say. Instagram, which gives companies on a shoestring budget the ability to craft and distribute catalog-worthy images, frequently inspires mimicry. It’s also an effective way to market knockoffs. One study showed how the Facebook-owned photo app is a hotbed for bots selling fake luxury goods. (Instagram did not respond to a request for comment.)

And even though Instagram is banned in China, copycats can simply download tools to get around the ban and trawl the photo app for inspiratio­n.

“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and that’s especially true in the digital age,” said Jason Brim, of Swedish bikewear brand Void, which first spotted fakes of its clothing on AliExpress a year and a half ago for about one-fifth the proper price. “If it’s online, it will be copied.”

Counterfei­t cycling apparel and equipment has grown in tandem with the rising popularity of the sport in recent years.

Cycling and all its associated gear is a $47-billion global business, five times the size of golf, according to consulting firm OC&C. That growth has happened more recently, as opposed to skateboard­ing and surfing, whose adherents don’t fetishize equipment quite like cyclists do, experts say.

Fuelling the sales, in part, are socalled Mamils, middle-aged men in Lycra who put their disposable income toward carbon bicycle frames, anatomical­ly mindful saddles and fashionabl­e apparel, known as kit.

Not all that gear is treated equally, however. After spending thousands on a bike (though there are inferior fakes of those, too), some riders may be reluctant to pay top dollar for apparel and instead choose a knock-off Rapha jersey (known as Raphaux), or more commonly, fake Oakley sunglasses.

Chinese e-commerce platforms are required by their country’s laws to respond to reports of infringeme­nt in a timely manner. Alibaba is notorious for fakes, but has in recent years enhanced its reporting system, resulting in a faster response. Its Taobao service deactivate­d the accounts of 230,000 sellers between September 2016 and August 2017 for violating intellectu­al property (IP) rights.

Contacted by the Times, Alibaba said it removed 163 listings Thursday on Taobao and AliExpress suspected of violating the rights of Team Dream, Void and Ornot.

“Alibaba’s mission as a company is to help small businesses thrive — their success is our success. So, protecting their intellectu­al property is critical,” the company said in a statement. “The best defence against IP criminals is the active co-operation of those seeking to earn a living from their IP” along with “law enforcemen­t and e-commerce marketplac­es like Alibaba.”

Barresi says Ornot — which operates out of a tiny storefront in Nob Hill, Calif., but has nearly 14,000 Instagram followers — hasn’t deemed the problem with fakes serious enough to devote more of its modest resources toward fighting.

“We are a three-person company,” he said. “We only have so much time. We can’t spend it taking legal action on AliExpress.”

But Andrew Love, head of brand security for one of the nation’s biggest bicycle makers, Specialize­d, said it’s imperative that small companies take action while they can. Once you’re big, counterfei­ters have more incentive to knock off your goods. “If a small brand fights back enough, counterfei­ters will realize they’re not worth the trouble,” he said. Talkington of Team Dream has similarly chosen to focus his energy on growing his brand rather than worrying about knockoffs. That means regular Instagram posts of cyclists ascending picturesqu­e mountain roads in colourful apparel.

“Social media is a doubled-edged sword,” said Talkington, 39. “The same reason we can be on the same playing field as bigger brands also means a graphic designer for counterfei­ters is looking at us. I’ve fully accepted it’s just part of what it means to be in fashion today.”

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 ?? GINA FERAZZI/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Sean Talkington, founder of Team Dream cycling apparel, is a victim of counterfei­ting by a Chinese e-commerce site, which is selling knock-off versions of the brand’s clothing.
GINA FERAZZI/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Sean Talkington, founder of Team Dream cycling apparel, is a victim of counterfei­ting by a Chinese e-commerce site, which is selling knock-off versions of the brand’s clothing.

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