Online counterfeit market beating out street sales: US

May 01, 2012
Street sellers of counterfeit goods will soon see their illegal market overtaken by the Internet
Street sellers of counterfeit brand-name perfumes and purses will soon see their illegal market overtaken by the Internet, a new US report on pirated intellectual property said Monday.

Street sellers of counterfeit brand-name perfumes and purses will soon see their illegal market overtaken by the Internet, a new US report on pirated intellectual property said Monday.

The US Trade Representative's annual Special 301 report -- which designates the world's worst offenders of US -- said there was "sustained growth" in copyright and trademark piracy "in virtually all formats."

But increasingly the Internet is the sales medium instead of mall shops and street carts, it said, and crackdowns on Internet sellers on one website just push them to another.

"Continued growth in the online sale of pirated and counterfeit hard goods that will soon surpass the volume of such goods sold by street vendors and in other physical markets," the report said.

"Enforcement authorities, unfortunately, face difficulties in responding to this trend."

It said that in China, perennially branded one of the worst sources of , even though web portals have bowed to pressure and tried to shut down sellers, the pirated goods sellers just crop up on new sites hawking the same goods.

"Even though major online sellers and distributors seem to be making efforts to ensure that the content available on their websites is legal, more than 75 percent of illicit sellers have reportedly re-listed the infringing goods," the USTR office said in the report.

It also said that a rise in the use of legitimate courier services to deliver bogus label goods is "making it more difficult for enforcement officials to detect these goods."

Another growing trend is separating the shipping of the goods and their labels for reassembly in the end-market country.

The US added Ukraine for the first time as expanded its "priority watch" list of the most egregious offenders and non-protectors of US rights to 13.

On the list are China, Russia, Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Chile, India, Indonesia, Israel, Pakistan, Thailand, Ukraine and Venezuela.

Some like China are major exporters of bogus goods, while Canada is faulted mainly for not having adequate legislation and for its weak law enforcement that allows transshipment of pirated and counterfeited goods.

A secondary "watch" list of offenders included 26 countries, with Malaysia and Spain both dropped due to legislation the US said increased the protection of copyrights.

In both countries the US said it remains concerned about enforcement.

Explore further: States scramble to attract suddenly hot cybersecurity firms

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

China piracy cost software industry $20bn in 2010

May 12, 2011

Piracy cost the global software industry more than $20 billion in losses in the China market last year despite the increasing use of legitimate programmes, an official survey showed Thursday.

'Rogue websites' bill introduced in US House

Oct 27, 2011

US lawmakers introduced a bill on Wednesday that would give US authorities more tools to crack down on websites accused of piracy of movies, television shows and music and the sale of counterfeit goods.

Recommended for you

States scramble to attract suddenly hot cybersecurity firms

2 hours ago

As data dragnets and information breaches dominate the news, states are scrambling to cash in on a rapidly expanding business sector by offering tax incentives to firms that protect sensitive information from outside attacks.

A year on, Assange stays put in Ecuadorean Embassy

8 hours ago

A year ago, Julian Assange skipped out on a date with Swedish justice. Rather than comply with a British order that he go to the Scandinavian country for questioning about sex crimes allegations, the WikiLeaks ...

Google asks US secret court to lift gag order (Update)

20 hours ago

Google on Tuesday sharply challenged the U.S. government's gag order on its Internet surveillance program, citing what it described as a constitutional free speech right to divulge how many requests it receives ...

Mysterious Facebook event sparks online buzz

Jun 17, 2013

A mysterious Facebook event set for Thursday has sparked buzz that the leading social network could be adding video to Instagram smartphone picture-sharing service.

User comments : 0

More news stories

Tech companies eye security that goes beyond passwords

In late February, a thief or thieves cracked into Evernote's digital vault filled with log-ins, passwords and email addresses belonging to 50 million users. It was a shocking cyberattack considering the Redwood City, Calif., ...

Multiview 3-D photography made simple

Computational photography is the use of clever light-gathering tricks and sophisticated algorithms to extract more information from the visual environment than traditional cameras can.

Apple TV adds HBO Go, WatchESPN to line up

Apple on Wednesday added HBO GO and WatchESPN to the line-up of programming available on its Apple TV devices that stream shows from the Internet to living room screens.