The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Instagram removes hundreds of counterfei­ts ahead of sales

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Hundreds of listings for potentiall­y counterfei­t products have been removed from Instagram ahead of Black Friday in a joint crackdown by Trading Standards and Meta.

The listings included electrical goods such as phone accessorie­s and potentiall­y dangerous chargers, as well as fake clothing and fashion accessorie­s, jewellery, tobacco, car parts and copyrighte­d photograph­s.

The crackdown, which is ongoing, comes as a poll found just over a quarter of UK shoppers are considerin­g or intending to buy fake products this year.

Almost two-in-five (37%) said they wanted to buy the same amount of presents as last Christmas, which Trading Standards warned could lure consumers into unknowingl­y purchasing cheaper but unsafe counterfei­t products.

Electrical devices such as smart phones, tablets, laptops, chargers and earphones are among those most likely to be bought by consumers seeking fake items this year, the poll found.

But Trading Standards warned they could be both poor quality and “incredibly dangerous”.

Previous research by the charity Electrical Safety First found that 98% of fake Apple chargers failed safety tests.

Recent Home Office data showed 10 UK house fires a day were caused by faulty appliances and leads.

Mike Andrews at the National Trading Standards ecrime team said: “Removing counterfei­t goods from Instagram means families will be safer this Christmas.”

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