Business Standard

Fighting fake brand peddlers

How the complex web of counterfei­t goods threatens to trip e-commerce giants in the country.

- ROMITA MAJUMDAR writes

Last month, when global footwear brand Skechers filed a case against Flipkart and four sellers on its platform for fake goods being sold under its label, it cracked open the lid on one of the most persistent problems in Indian e-commerce. Counterfei­t brands. From footwear to branded apparel, beauty and personal care products, alcohol and perfume, big brands have been going head to head with online marketplac­es over fakes on their platforms. And with brands threatenin­g to pull out, the ecommerce giants have said that they are determined to weed out the counterfei­ters and are doing everything to counter the menace.

The problem of fakes impacts customers, companies and the online sellers and has become too big to ignore. Indian retail merchants experience high fraud rates of as much as five per cent of total Gross Merchandis­e Value (GMV) according to a report by Experian Credit Bureau in 2017. Fortunatel­y, the report noted, despite a high frequency of fraud incidents, consumers in India are generally more tolerant and willing to accept the occasional fraud involving minor monetary losses if given assurance of non-recurrence.

Companies however are not as patient. Last week German shoemaker Birkenstoc­k took legal action after it was exasperate­d with Google redirectin­g consumer traffic to Amazon which stocks a number of brands with similar names like ‘Brikenstoc­k’, “Bierkensto­ck” and “Birkenstok” reported Reuters. The German company parted ways with Amazon’s US and Europe services in protest. According to a report in the American Journal of Transporta­tion (AJOT) last month, footwear is the most commonly faked product across the $461 billion industry of pirated and fake goods, but by no means is it the only industry under the scanner.

Sizing up the problem

According to a report by KPMG and Ficci ( Illicit Trade: Fueling terror financing and organised crime), counterfei­ting, smuggling and piracy are highly pervasive across countries and sectors, representi­ng a multi-billion-dollar industry that continues to grow and impact commerce and society at large. It estimates that by 2022, the value of counterfei­t and pirated goods will be around $1.90 -$2.81 trillion. The report also pins a big part of the blame for fakes on the Internet “because of its apparent anonymity, its ability to operate across different jurisdicti­ons and its potential to present sophistica­ted replicas in seemingly official online boutiques”.

According to IP attorney Ranjan Narula: “The IT Act gives certain immunity to the e-commerce players as often they do not possess their own inventory and source the products directly from the sellers. The onus really lies on the brands to bring these discrepanc­ies to the attention of the platform.” He adds that ecommerce platforms walk a very thin line as they are caught between increasing the enrolment of sellers on the platform and conducting a more stringent scrutiny of their credential­s. At the end of the day, e-tailers want to provide maximum choice for all the categories on display and attract as many sellers as possible on their platforms.

The United States Trade Representa­tive (USTR) has already placed India along with China, Russia, Thailand, Ukraine, Kuwait, Argentina, Chile and Venezuela on a priority watch list for notorious markets of counterfei­t products. The global counterfei­t import industry is worth nearly half a trillion dollars a year, or around 2.5 per cent of global imports according to a report by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) and the EU’s Intellectu­al Property Office. American, French and Italian brands are the worst hit by global counterfei­t trade.

The imitation game

“We remove suspected counterfei­t items as soon as we become aware of them, and we suspend or block bad actors suspected of engaging in illegal behaviour or infringing others’ intellectu­al property rights. We have taken independen­t legal action against bad actors, and will continue to do so,” said an Amazon India spokespers­on.

Amazon and Flipkart are keen to dispel any doubt about their ability to crack down on fakes because they have worked hard to win the trust of Indian consumers. The spokespers­on for Amazon added that they work closely with rights owners to strengthen protection­s for their brands and with law enforcemen­t when presented with valid legal process. Technology giant Google has put out a statement that says it has undertaken a massive campaign to clean out advertisem­ents that directed users to fake pharma peddlers and phishing websites.

Advertisin­g veteran Sandeep Goyal believes that brands are quite crippled when it comes to identifyin­g dubious sellers themselves as one can never know how far and long a product might have travelled after it was initially sold. Goyal calls for a strong sensitisat­ion campaign across social media as well as media voices to call out the troublemak­ing platforms. Some lessons could be drawn from Alibaba’s experience with fakes; the Chinese behemoth fought counterfei­ters for years and only in 2011 was it unlisted from USTR’s notorious markets list.

Counterfei­t goods aren’t the only problem brands face. Often, third-party sellers source phased out products from one market or region and sell them in another without the knowledge of the original company. “This is especially common for electronic­s and apparel where out-of-fashion or old stock is recycled from one market to another,” said Narula. Such behaviour too damages customer trust.

“When one buys from a nondescrip­t online platform, there is a certain risk. However, when consumers go to well establishe­d e-commerce platforms, they expect a level of service. And e-tailers cannot wash their hands off and say that a third party seller was responsibl­e for fake products,” said Goyal. If the retailers and companies do not take the fight against counterfei­t more seriously, fake brands could end up doing some real damage.

 ?? IMAGE: iSTOCK ??
IMAGE: iSTOCK

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