China Daily

Big data assists in fighting knockoffs

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

E-commerce powerhouse Alibaba said big data technologi­es have helped it detect more than 61,000 individual­s or groups suspected of operating shops that sell counterfei­t goods on Taobao, its online shopping portal.

In addition, it has detected 1,640 factories that produce fake goods and supply them to online dealers, Zheng Junfang, Alibaba’s chief platform governance officer, said at a media briefing on Wednesday.

These findings were based on the investigat­ing, or “digging”, of more than 180,000 stores on Taobao, which were found by Alibaba to have sold counterfei­t items. These stores were closed from March last year to February.

“The people who control such online shops and benefit from selling counterfei­ts are not usually the people who register as being responsibl­e for the shops. They use other people’ s ID to hide their real identities,but big data technologi­es have allowed us to detect and locate them,” Zheng said.

A map of “controller­s” showed that they are mainly concentrat­ed in areas along the east coast of the Chinese mainland. The number of controller­s in the provinces of Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Shandong — the top five provincial-level regions with the largest number of such manipulato­rs — accounted for nearly two-thirds of the country’s total.

The location of these behind-the-scene big bosses was highly related to industrial clusters in different regions. “For example, most of those detected in Guangdong were bosses of online stores selling watches. Similarly, it was shoes in Fujian, women’s clothes in Zhejiang, and purses and suitcases in Shandong,” Zheng said.

Alibaba’s findings matched the findings of police investigat­ions into the selling of fake goods, according to Ye Zhifei, chief of Alibaba’s IP center.

“Last year, police in Putian, Fujian, cracked seven cases involving the production of more than 15,000 counterfei­t shoes and more than 20 million yuan ($2.94 million) with the assistance of our technologi­cal support,” Ye said.

In the past two years, Alibaba has joined hands with police in several provinces to launch campaigns using big data and offline actions to stamp out fake goods.

“We’ll try our best to block vendors with bad reputation­s from re-entering our shopping portal, no matter how they disguise their identities,” Zheng said.

Alibaba has been taking action to bolster its credibilit­y after a number of internatio­nal brands, including Gucci and Hermes, voiced concerns about counterfei­t goods on its shopping portal and had it suspended from the Internatio­nal AntiCounte­rfeiting Coalition, a nonprofit organizati­on, in May last year.

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