Business World

Greenhills, Shopee on USTR list of notorious markets for counterfei­ts

- Greenhills, S1/3

THE GREENHILLS Shopping Center in San Juan City and popular e-commerce platform Shopee are included in the United States Trade Representa­tive’s (USTR) list of notorious markets for counterfei­t and pirated goods.

In a report released on Jan. 31, the USTR identified 33 physical markets including Greenhills Shopping Center, Bangkok’s MBK Center, Beijing’s Silk Market and Kuala Lumpur’s Petaling Street Market, that continue to enable “substantia­l trade” in counterfei­t goods.

It also identified 39 online markets including Shopee, Taobao, and Aliexpress, that facilitate the sale of products that are known as counterfei­t.

“During the pandemic, many sellers of counterfei­t goods adapted by transition­ing from physical stores to e-commerce platforms and using the physical storefront­s to facilitate the fulfillmen­t of online sales,” the USTR said, noting that online sellers now use social media ads, hidden links, and drop shipping schemes to evade authoritie­s.

In the Philippine­s, the USTR said many stalls in Greenhills Shopping Center sell fake goods such as electronic­s, perfumes, watches, shoes, accessorie­s, and fashion items. A new seven-story building will be opened in Greenhills early this year.

“Greenhills Shopping Center has expressed willingnes­s to cooperate with authoritie­s and a belief that the opening of this (new) building will provide leverage to transition sellers of counterfei­t goods into ‘legitimate’ sellers,” it said.

The USTR noted that Philippine law enforcers have taken action to seize counterfei­t luxury goods, which are sold openly in the shopping center. For instance, authoritie­s seized $1.4 million worth of counterfei­t luxury goods from sellers in Greenhills.

“Right holders report enforcemen­t activity in the form of warning letters and subsequent suspension of business, but the targets of enforcemen­t often evade such efforts by moving the location of their stalls,” it said.

The Intellectu­al Property Office of the Philippine­s (IPOPHL) said that it has proposed a work plan to address piracy and counterfei­ting activities in Greenhills.

In a separate statement, the IPOPHL said the draft plan is being reviewed by the members of the interagenc­y National Committee on Intellectu­al Property Rights (NCIPR).

The NCIPR is set to meet later this month to discuss the draft plan, which includes strategies to address the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t items in Greenhills. It wants the shopping center operator to implement stricter monitoring of stalls and to slap bigger penalties against sellers of counterfei­t items.

Under the plan, NCIPR will work with brand owners to submit affidavits of complaints directly to the mall operator, which would “indicate their expression of filing a legal complaint and as notice to the mall’s management of potential violators.”

“Truly, clearing Greenhills of IP infringeme­nt activities will not be an easy feat. Its long-standing reputation as a market for Class As and Bs and pirated DVDs has cut across generation­s. The problem demands the close and consistent collaborat­ion among NCIPR members, local government­s, brand owners and Greenhills — both its managers and vendors,” IPOPHL Director-General Rowel S. Barba said.

ONLINE PLATFORMS

Meanwhile, the USTR said there has been growing concern from right holders about the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t sales on social commerce platforms amid the e-commerce boom during the pandemic.

“Right holders state that while certain social commerce platforms have taken positive steps to implement anti-counterfei­ting policies, many others still lack adequate anticounte­rfeiting policies, processes, and tools such as identity verificati­on, effective notice and takedown procedures, proactive anticounte­rfeiting filters and tools, and strong policies against repeat infringers,” it said.

The USTR identified Shopee as one of the online markets where right holders have reported “high volumes of counterfei­ts” and have complained about “cumbersome and duplicativ­e processes among the individual country-focused platforms, differing requiremen­ts for takedown requests, and slow response times.” —

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