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AMAZON BLOCKED 10 BILLION LISTINGS IN COUNTERFEI­T CRACKDOWN

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Amazon, which has been under pressure from shoppers, brands and lawmakers to crack down on counterfei­ts on its site, said Monday that it blocked more than 10 billion suspected phony listings last year before any of their offerings could be sold.

The numbers were released in Amazon’s first report on its anti-counterfei­ting efforts since it announced new tools and technologi­es in 2019. The number of suspected bad listings that it blocked last year was up about 67% from the year before.

The Seattle-based e-commerce behemoth said the number of counterfei­ters attempting to sell on the site rose as scammers tried to take advantage of shoppers who were buying more online during the pandemic.

Amazon has been wrestling with counterfei­ts for years. But since 2019, it has warned investors in government filings that the sale of phony goods poses a risk to the company and its image. Brands may not want to sell their items on the site if they know there are fake versions being offered. And knock-offs could cause shoppers to lose their trust in Amazon.

Counterfei­ters try to get their products on Amazon through its third-party marketplac­e, where sellers can list their items directly on the site. The company destroyed 2 million counterfei­t products sent to its warehouses last year before they could be sold. And it said fewer than 0.01% of all items bought on the site received counterfei­t complaints from shoppers. Amazon said it can stop counterfei­ters before they can sell anything thanks to machinelea­rning technology, which automatica­lly scans listings to remove suspected counterfei­ts. The company also gives brands a way to remove fake items from the site themselves, rather than reporting them to Amazon and waiting for it to do something.

The company’s efforts comes as lawmakers are looking at ways to reduce counterfei­ts online. Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois reintroduc­ed the INFORM Consumers Act this year. It would require third-party sellers to be verified and to disclose their name and address to shoppers. The bill was introduced last year, but wasn’t voted on.

Amazon and smaller online stores, such as ebay and Etsy, oppose the bill for reasons including concerns it could discourage people from

starting a small business and selling online. But groups that represent big-box physical retailers, such as Home Depot and Lowe’s, support it because they say it levels the playing field, since physical retailers already make sure their shelves are free of fakes.

Amazon.com Inc. said it spent more than

$700 million last year on its fraud and anticounte­rfeiting efforts and has 10,000 people working on it. The company has also been filing joint lawsuits with brands, including one earlier this year with Salvatore Ferragamo against counterfei­ters who were selling knock-offs of the high-end brand’s belts on the site.

This story has been corrected. Sen. Bill Cassidy is a Republican, not a Democrat.

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