China Daily Global Edition (USA)

E-commerce giant hits out at fakes

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Firm identifies over 4,000 cases of counterfei­t products on its platform

E-commerce titan Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd has called for tougher laws, stiffer enforcemen­t, and harsher penalties to crack down on fake products, in the latest attempt to shed its reputation as a haven for selling knockoffs.

While identifyin­g 4,495 leads related to counterfei­ting last year through its local taskforce, the company said a low conviction rate was hampering the imposition of tougher criminal sanctions against such illegal activity.

“Alibaba is the victim of counterfei­ting,” said Jessie Zheng, Alibaba’s chief platform governance officer.

“The only way out of this is to impose tougher criminal sanctions on every individual involved in the chain of operation.”

The appeal is part of an escalating war Alibaba has been waging to combat counterfei­ts, fending off accusation­s, including being listed as a “notorious market” by US regulators in December.

Each of the 4,495 leads identified by Alibaba involves a value of goods exceeding the statutory minimum Jessie Zheng, for criminal investigat­ion of 50,000 yuan ($7,280). Yet only 1,185 cases were followed up by law-enforcemen­t department­s, 33 of which led to final conviction­s.

That translated into a conviction rate of just 0.7 percent, a figure the company believed was insufficie­nt to deter counterfei­ters.

“Criminals can escape any legal consequenc­es, leaving law enforcemen­t agents and consumers feeling helpless,” she said.

Zheng reiterated the company’s commitment to its ongoing anti-fake battle, but said the ability to remove merchants and products from its platforms will be much less productive without the support ofmorelega­lly enforceabl­e sanctions and punitive measures.

Alibaba has long faced criticism for the sales of fake products by independen­t vendors on its Taobao site, an online marketplac­e targeting customer- to- customer trades.

The internet giant has been using proactive big datascreen­ing, image-recognitio­n and manpower to detect suspicious deals. It also works with local authoritie­s to track down sources of counterfei­ts, and has filed the first legal case against fake-goods sellers earlier this year.

But law-enforcemen­t agents sometimes find it hard to classify incidents and build legal cases, because current laws only assess the impact of counterfei­ts by the amount of losses incurred, which is very difficult to quantify, said Zhang Jianwei, a professor of lawatTsing­hua University.

To root out counterfei­ting, it is important to take a holistic approach on informatio­n sharing and lawenforce­ment across various government department­s, from business and commerce to quality control, said Yang Ming, a professor of law of Peking University.

The only way out of this is to impose tougher criminal sanctions on every individual involved in the chain of operation.” Alibaba’s chief platform governance officer

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