China Daily

More suits over sale of fake goods expected

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

E-commerce giant Alibaba Group may take more rogue vendors to court after suing two sellers of fake Swarovski watches offered on its shopping sites, the first such lawsuit in China, analysts said.

The case, announced by Alibaba on Wednesday and filed in Shenzhen Longgang District People’s Court, is part of Alibaba’s larger effort to rein in counterfei­t goods. It comes weeks after Alibaba’s Taobao online shopping portal was put back on US trade authoritie­s’ list of sites known for selling counterfei­t goods.

The company said it seeks 1.4 million yuan ($203,300) for “violation of contract and goodwill” and intends to take similar legal action against other merchants.

More such lawsuits are likely to follow, since they make violation of law a lot more costly for counterfei­t producers, said Zhou Hui, an assistant researcher of law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“Alibaba is trying to shed its fame as a paradise rampant with fake items. It may seek further court action to broaden anti-counterfei­t mechanisms and better deter counterfei­t producers,” Zhou said.

Alibaba said it used big data and monitored suspected fake merchandis­e to identify counterfei­t products worth 200 million yuan and locate the sellers in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

“Selling counterfei­ts not only violates our service agreement, it also infringes on the intellectu­al property rights of the brand owner, puts inferior products in the hands of consumers and ruins the hardearned trust Alibaba has with our customers,” said Jessie Zheng, Alibaba Group’s chief platform governance officer.

The move is a clear response of Alibaba to criticism from US trade regulators, who included

the company on their Notorious Markets list, citing a high level of alleged piracy and counterfei­ting, said Ling Xiao, partner of Hui Ye Law Firm, which specialize­s in investment and financing.

“Any news shorting Ali ba ba might be detrimenta­l to its reputation and share price. While trying to shut down shady manufactur­ers wouldn’t be the best tactic, litigation­stands as a more effective way for companies who haven’ t been vocal about their anti-fake efforts,” Ling said.

Alibaba has been taking action to bolster its reliabilit­y and boost credibilit­y after a number of brands, including Gucci and Tiffany, voiced con- cern about rampant knockoffs on its website, resulting in Alibaba being suspended from the Internatio­nal Anti Counterfei­ting Coalition, a non-profit organizati­on, in May last year.

It cracked down last year on 417 manufactur­ing and sales sites offering counterfei­t products worth 1.43 billion yuan.

In November, US e-retailer Amazon.com filed two lawsuits against vendors allegedly selling counterfei­t goods through its internet marketplac­e, the first of its kind in the company’s 20-plus year history. The move accords with China’s massive crackdown on counterfei­ts, which sharpens the focus on the responsibi­lity of trading platforms, Ling said.

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