National Post (National Edition)

THOUSANDS OF FRAUDSTERS ARE SELLING VIA SHOPIFY, ANALYSIS FINDS.

- DAVE LEE

Tens of thousands of sellers are using the e-commerce platform Shopify Inc. to scam consumers and sell counterfei­t goods, after the company's rapid growth has left it exposed to fraudsters.

According to the e-commerce authentica­tion service FakeSpot, which analyzed more than 120,000 Shopify sites, as many as 21 per cent posed a risk to shoppers.

Shopify has been one of the big corporate winners of the pandemic, with brick-and-mortar retailers rushing to the platform — which offers tools to quickly start selling online — as lockdowns took effect.

But con artists have been just as nimble. Some shops appeared to be fronts for collecting personal data without any intent to actually deliver a product, FakeSpot said. It also identified a range of other issues including brand infringeme­nt and extremely poor customer service.

“With the trajectory of Shopify's growth, there comes a point in time when they will need to tackle this problem very seriously,” said Saoud Khalifah, FakeSpot's chief executive. He explained that many of the stores they found appeared to be China-based merchants posing as U.S. small businesses.

A spokeswoma­n for Shopify said the service faced an “industry-wide” problem. It would not share its process for verifying the location of businesses, citing “security reasons.”

“We recognize there will be those — however few they may be relative to our base of more than one million merchants — that may abuse our service, and we take this matter seriously,” the spokeswoma­n said, adding that the company had employed “multiple teams” to combat the issue, though she declined to say how many people it had working on it.

“To date, we have terminated thousands of stores and routinely implement new measures to address fraud and other activities that violate our policies. Although these issues challenge the e-commerce industry at large, Shopify is committed to being part of the solution.”

After being alerted by the Financial Times, Shopify suspended two sites. They included MDRN Supply Co., which appeared to be selling counterfei­t goods imitating products from luxury brands Supreme and Louis Vuitton. Previous customers had left reviews on third-party sites, such as the Better Business Bureau, accusing it of not fulfilling orders. Its owners could not be reached for comment.

Touted as the “anti-Amazon,” Shopify's software offers templates, inventory management and secure payment functions on a retailer's own website, rather than having to compete on the cutthroat Amazon.com Inc. marketplac­e. Since March, Shopify has more than tripled in value; its market capitaliza­tion is now about US$140 billion.

But unlike Amazon, where negative reviews or a high percentage of returns can quickly see a seller down-ranked or removed, the decentrali­zed nature of Shopify means entire stores can operate with no obvious signs that its customers are unhappy.

New business is often attracted via advertisin­g placed on social media, particular­ly Facebook and Instagram, where legitimate retailers are mostly indistingu­ishable from suspicious ones.

Aaron Cheris, an e-commerce specialist from consultanc­y Bain & Co, said that greater investment in anti-counterfei­t measures at Amazon, eBay Inc. and other marketplac­es had seen criminals migrate, giving relative newcomer Shopify “growing pains” as it eagerly attracted new merchants.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Touted as the “anti-Amazon,” Shopify's software offers templates, inventory management and secure pay functions.
JUSTIN TANG / BLOOMBERG FILES Touted as the “anti-Amazon,” Shopify's software offers templates, inventory management and secure pay functions.
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