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Showing posts with label Designers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Designers. Show all posts

Monday, 18 May 2015

Help Us Fight Fakes, Alibaba's Impassioned Plea to Global Brands

Jack Ma Alibaba Founder pic: Bloomberg News
Alibaba's head of internet security Ni Liang makes an impassioned plea for help to stop fakes to Global brands in an exclusive interview today with John Ruwitch, Reuters.

"HANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - When it comes to fighting fakes, Alibaba's head of internet security says cooperation beats the courtroom any day.

Ni Liang, who runs the Hangzhou, China-based company's anti-counterfeiting operations, was speaking to Reuters days after Gucci, Yves Saint Laurent and other luxury brands owned by Paris-based Kering SA sued Alibaba in New York, alleging the e-commerce giant had knowingly made it possible for counterfeiters to sell fakes.

Ni said brands had a better chance of succeeding in clamping down on the pervasive counterfeit trade if they talked to Alibaba, instead of suing it.

The company has been dogged for years by accusations that it doesn't do enough to fight intellectual property rights violations and also listed counterfeits as a risk before its record-breaking $25 billion IPO in September.

"I strongly believe that spending money on lawsuits could result in a completely different outcome than cooperating with us," Ni said in an interview during a rare visit by the media to Alibaba's internet security headquarters.

"If a brand doesn't cooperate with us we'll still fight fakes for them... But when we cooperate we can fight better."

Alibaba employs some 2,000 employees to battle counterfeits. At its internet security command centre, a computer screen covering an entire wall tallies in real-time attempts by vendors to list suspected counterfeits and shows which brands they were trying to sell. Vendors known to have attempted to sell fakes are also tracked.

Another 5,000 "volunteers" around the country, including sellers and buyers, help identify vendors of phony goods, Ni said, adding that Alibaba spent about 100 million yuan ($16 million) last year to covertly buy products and check their authenticity.

Ni said this figure could rise to 150 million this year. "I believe we spend more than any platform or company in the world on anti-counterfeit efforts," he added.

REAL-TIME

Alibaba's two popular platforms are Taobao, on which consumers buy and sell goods to each other much like they do on the marketplace run by U.S.-based eBay Inc , and Tmall, an online shopping mall that vendors use to sell their products, similar to Amazon.com Inc .

The company, founded by Jack Ma, controls 80 percent of all online retail in China, handling goods worth about $97 billion in the quarter ended March 31.

Alibaba has so far signed more than 1,300 memoranda of understanding on cooperation with brands, including Microsoft , Apple and Louis Vuitton , to fight fakes, Ni said.

Overall, Alibaba's platforms have seen a drop in the number of counterfeits as a percentage of goods traded, Ni said, but added the number of fake products discovered by the company rose two-thirds to 130 million last year from 80 million in 2012.

Counterfeit goods can be found on all Chinese e-commerce platforms, despite efforts to fight them, because of the sheer scale of the problem and the huge demand for these products.

No pictures of the internet security war room are allowed. An Alibaba spokeswoman told Reuters they could not name any of the brands being targeted by fraudsters but data on the tracking screen showed more than 5,000 attempted listings of suspected fake products had been detected and removed by noon.

A search for "Gucci" and "Guggi" on Alibaba's eBay-like Taobao site also highlights the complexity of the problem.

Ads appear for products that look like genuine articles as well as clear knock-offs. Ni said determining authenticity from photos is notoriously difficult, and products that bear a likeness to the real deal may not infringe upon intellectual property rights.

Brands and industry groups have complained that Alibaba makes it difficult to remove suspect product listings. Ni said last year his team removed 12 million listings after receiving complaints involving about 20 million, but the process can be lengthy.

About 40 percent of all items flagged were either genuine or it was impossible to conclude that they were fake, he said.

"We have to have an audit mechanism for complaints made by brand holders, and this audit mechanism increases the time it takes to get fake products pulled down," he said, adding that Alibaba intends to double the number of cases it sends to the police for prosecution this year."

(Additional reporting by Jane Lee in SHANGHAI; Editing by Miral Fahmy)

Read the original article on Reuters.


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Friday, 4 January 2013

Dolce & Gabbana's tax evasion trial begins


Italian fashion designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana are on trial for tax evasion in the Italian financial capital, Milan.

Designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana
You may remember from our early post back in October 2012 Date set for Dolce & Gabbana's tax evasion trial, we reported the designer duo were due to appear on the date set for the trial, 03 December 2012, and now it begins with an unexpected twist to the case.

The pair, of Dolce and Gabbana, are accused of owing tax on a sum of over a billion euros in Italy after moving their brand to Luxembourg in 2004.

Prosecutors allege that they sold their firms to a holding company for well below actual market value.

The designers deny the charges and have said that the allegations are "absurd".

They have not made any recent statements since Mr Gabbana criticised the high court's decision last year, threatening, in a tweet, to leave the country from which he draws much of his inspiration.

Each designer is accused of owing taxes on a sum of 416m euros (£337m; $540m), as well as the Luxembourg-based firm owing tax on 200m euros (£162m; $260m), according to Italy's La Repubblica newspaper.

Six other people, including the pair's tax consultant, are also on trial.

If found guilty, they risk a sentence of up to five years in prison.

At Monday's hearing, the designers' lawyers requested that the entire trial should be annulled due to procedural irregularities.

The court is due to rule on the request on 14 December.

The investigation into the firm's tax affairs began in 2007. They were initially cleared in April 2011 but Italy's highest court overturned that ruling, ordering that the case should be sent back to trial.

The designers are known the world over, with pop star Madonna and model Naomi Campbell among their famous clients.

Designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana
Rates of both corporate tax, and tax evasion, are among the world's highest in Italy.

Prime Minister Mario Monti has made cracking down on evasion a national priority with a series of high-profile police raids in yacht marinas and chic ski resorts targeting people accused of not paying up.

In 2000, the late tenor Luciano Pavarotti paid more than nine million euros in back taxes when he settled a four-year dispute.

Former Argentine soccer star Diego Maradona is also reported to owe some 38m euros in unpaid taxes to the Italian authorities. He has said he wants to clear up his situation.

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