Savannah Morning News

Live online shopping avoids some tools that spot fakes

- Arriana McLymore

NEW YORK – Livestream shopping – where buyers and sellers transact in real-time video – is growing in the United States while technology to police counterfei­t goods has so far not kept up, a situation that makes it easier for fake goods to flood the market, patent lawyers said.

Livestream shopping has been popularize­d by e-commerce sites like Alibaba.com and TikTok’s sister company Douyin after dominating the retail scene in China.

In the U.S., TikTok merchants hawk jewelry, preowned Louis Vuitton handbags and $2 lip glosses during hourslong video sessions. Sellers’ streams can have dozens to thousands of viewers who ask about product materials, prices and availabili­ty. Copyright violations in live video are difficult to track. In general, e-commerce infringeme­nt enforcemen­t can often feel like a game of “whack-a-mole” for lawyers and software companies who monitor the internet due to the swelling volume of violations. In one example, software firm Red Points spotted at least 4.6 million instances of global copyright violations in 2023, up from 4 million a year earlier.

Amazon, the largest U.S. online marketplac­e, identified and seized 7 million counterfei­t products globally in 2023, up from 6 million in 2022, according to the company’s brand protection reports.

Livestream­ing is a “haven for infringeme­nt until the detection and enforcemen­t catches up to that mode of sales,” said Luke DeMarte, an intellectu­al property lawyer at Michael Best & Friedrich, referring to live shopping.

TikTok and Amazon both said they have advanced technology in place to stop merchants from selling fakes. TikTok said it monitors live video with a mixture of algorithms and humans and Amazon said it uses humans to monitor livestream shopping.

Livestream sales on the web have promise. Americans will spend $1.32 trillion on e-commerce this year, according to eMarketer, a research firm. Live commerce could reach 5% of that spending by 2026 as more traditiona­l retailers including Macy’s, Zara, Nordstrom and Kohl’s adopt the marketing technique, according to Coresight Research. Some lawyers and the brands they represent use machine learning software to search e-commerce platforms for possible infringeme­nt in pictures, product descriptio­ns and advertisem­ents, but live videos bring added challenges.

DeMarte and other U.S. trademark lawyers said the live nature of livestream transactio­ns makes it hard to identify and weed out counterfei­ts and fakes despite growth of new technologi­es aimed at detecting infringeme­nt.

Artificial intelligen­ce and algorithms can currently spot still images and text that infringe on brands’ copyrights and trademarks, the lawyers and software firms say. Similarly, e-commerce platforms often use AI and algorithms to block third-party vendors from posting counterfei­t merchandis­e.

But the technology to scan violations in video is scarce.

Small business attorney Michelle Murphy said she receives five to 10 notificati­ons every day from an AI vendor that tracks intellectu­al property infringeme­nt across still images listed on Etsy, eBay, Amazon and TikTok. Out of the hundreds of alerts she’s received, none of them have flagged infringeme­nt on shoppable video.

 ?? MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS FILE ?? Americans will spend $1.32 trillion on e-commerce this year, according to eMarketer.
MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS FILE Americans will spend $1.32 trillion on e-commerce this year, according to eMarketer.

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