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Alibaba says it wages war on fakes

By BLOOMBERG (China Daily) Updated: 2016-10-13 08:59

Alibaba says it wages war on fakes

Visitor walks at the headquarters of Alibaba Group in Hangzhou city, East China's Zhejiang province, Sept 21, 2014. [Photo/IC]

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd said it has tightened policies against copyright infringements and made it easier for brands to issue complaints and request removal of counterfeit items on its platforms.

China's biggest e-commerce company took down 380 million product listings and closed about 180,000 Taobao stores in the 12 months to August, according to an Oct 7 letter the company submitted to the US Trade Representative. It has also closed about 675 production, storage, or sales operations of counterfeit products, it added.

The efforts seek to address repeated complaints Alibaba has received from associations which criticize it for not taking enough proactive measures to fight counterfeits. As Alibaba seeks to bring in more than half its revenue from overseas, shaking off a reputation as a haven for knockoffs and winning the trust of foreign brands will be a key to expansion outside of China.

"At Alibaba, counterfeit goods are absolutely unacceptable," Alibaba said in its letter to the USTR. "We do not tolerate or condone those who steal other people's intellectual property."

The American Apparel & Footwear Association said earlier this month that the USTR should reinstate Alibaba and its constituent platforms on the US government's Notorious Markets list, a designation applied to websites and markets where there is large-scale copyright infringement. Alibaba was removed from the Notorious Markets list in 2012.

Alibaba said starting in January it would become more stringent on repeat infringers, expediting the closure of accounts that accumulated three infractions.

The company has the capacity to process 100 million pieces of data per second, which enables it to scan more than 10 million product listings a day.

To strengthen its copyright protection team, Alibaba in January appointed Matthew Bassiur as vice-president of its global intellectual property department.

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