USA TODAY US Edition

Alibaba faces uphill battle

China’s online shopping giant forms coalition to fight counterfei­t sales

- Marco della Cava @marcodella­cava USA TODAY

Online giant, coalition fight fake goods,

“The most powerful weapon against counterfei­ting today is data and analytics.” Jessie Zheng, chief platform governance officer of Alibaba Group

Shopping might be easier thanks to the Internet, but so is getting duped by counterfei­ters.

Chinese online shopping giant Alibaba announced Monday it has formed a coalition that will leverage the power of big data to crack down on purveyors of fake goods, whose value in 2015 exceeded $1.7 trillion, according to the Internatio­nal Anti-Counterfei­ting Coalition.

U.S. companies suffer most at the hand of brand pirates, with one-in-five knockoffs infringing on American products, and 63% of counterfei­t goods come from China, according to the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

The mission of the Alibaba Big Data Anti-Counterfei­ting Alliance, whose 20 members include luxury brands such as Louis Vuitton and Swarovski, is to pool informatio­n, data and expertise in intellectu­al property authentica­tion with the ultimate goal of “helping block, screen and take down infringing listings,” according to a statement from Alibaba.

“The most powerful weapon against counterfei­ting today is data and analytics, and the only way we can win this war is to unite,” said Jessie Zheng, Chief Platform Governance Officer of Alibaba Group.

Alibaba, which sells 14.5 billion items a year to Amazon’s 5 billion according to courier ParcelHero, has been aggressive about using data analytics to put counterfei­ters out of business.

Its software currently scans 10 million product listings a day. In the 12 months ending last Au- gust, the company closed down 180,000 third-party stores for traffickin­g in fake items. During that same period, Alibaba provid- ed sufficient informatio­n to brands and law enforcemen­t agencies to close 675 counterfei­t goods manufactur­ing operations, the company said.

According to the OECD’s 2016 report, “Trade in Counterfei­t and Pirated Goods: Mapping the Economic Impact,” brands most affected by counterfei­ters include Rolex, Ray-Ban, Louis Vuitton and Nike. In fact, footwear tops the categories, followed by clothing, leather goods and electrical equipment.

Alibaba’s executive chairman, Jack Ma, recently traveled to New York City’s Trump Tower to meet with President-elect Donald Trump. Ma has pledged to create 1 million U.S. jobs by growing trade between small U.S. businesses and Chinese consumers.

Amazon recently announced plans to create 100,000 U.S. jobs over the next 18 months. Most of the positions will be at fulfillmen­t centers, including new facilities under constructi­on in California, Florida, New Jersey and Texas. The new employees will also work in areas such as cloud technology, machine learning, and advanced logistics.

 ?? JACK MA BY DREW ANGERER, GETTY IMAGES ??
JACK MA BY DREW ANGERER, GETTY IMAGES
 ?? CHRISTIAN CHARISIUS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? In the 12 months ending last August, Alibaba closed down 180,000 third-party stores for traffickin­g in fake items.
CHRISTIAN CHARISIUS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY In the 12 months ending last August, Alibaba closed down 180,000 third-party stores for traffickin­g in fake items.
 ?? TIMOTHY CARLY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President-elect Donald Trump met recently with Jack Ma, founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group.
TIMOTHY CARLY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES President-elect Donald Trump met recently with Jack Ma, founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group.

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