eBay Fined Again Over Fake Goods
July 01, 2008 | by Christopher Nickson
A French court has ordered eBay to pay a whopping $63 million, saying its French site hadn't done enough to stop sales of counterfeit performs and bags.
You can find almost anything on eBay. Unfortunately, when it comes to designer goods, a percentage of what you can find on the auction site is counterfeit. It’s angered the manufacturers of luxury goods, who’ve found their names undermined by the fakes.
That’s why luxury goods group LVMH took eBay to court in France, asserting the site hadn’t done enough to stem the sale of fakes on its French site.
The suit was brought by six companies who belong to LVMH, including four perfume makes, who accused eBay of “illicit sales” of their brands. They extended the action beyond fakes, according to the BBC, arguing that even sales of their real perfumes were illegal as only specialist dealers were allowed to retail them.
Yesterday the court handed down its result, ordering eBay to pay a massive $63 million for allowing counterfeit sales on its site – and it also ordered eBay to stop selling Dior, Guerlain, Kenzo and Givenchy perfumes.
eBay spokeswoman Vanessa Canzini said:
"If counterfeits appear on our sites, we take them down swiftly, but today’s ruling is not about our fight against counterfeit. Today’s ruling is about an attempt by LVMH to protect uncompetitive commercial practices at the expense of consumer choice and the livelihood of law-abiding sellers that eBay empowers everyday. We will fight this ruling on their behalf; we will be seeking leave to appeal.”
This is the second time in less than a month that eBay has had to pay for letting counterfeit items be sold on the site; earlier this month Hermes won a suit against the auction giant. Taken together, these rulings could mean that eBay will have to seriously rethink its business model.
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Kevin on Jul 3rd, 2008 at 9:30 AM:
This is ridiculous...
Remind me again why we're even humoring French companies?
First of all, there are hundreds if not thousands of specialty dealers that have accounts with eBay, b/c it's an additional market place. This is why PayPal has a merchant account, in addition to the normal seller/buyer accounts. So, that argument purely lacks reason.
Here in America, we actually have a freedom to sell the **** we don't want anymore... What we buy is essentially ours to do what we will with. So, once I buy your crappy cologne or perfume, and I think it sucks... I'll be selling that stink water to the next person that deems it necessary to smell bad. Enjoy your dose of reality.
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Matt on Jul 1st, 2008 at 8:55 AM:
I havent been impressed with EBAY this last year and I know a lot of legitimate businesses are struggling due to the changes EBAY has made, but when it comes to "fake" goods, EBAY should not be held liable. If you walk thru the streets of France, their own Police officers ignore the street peddlers selling fake Gucci and Armani items, when a cop rolls around, the peddlers roll up their blanket and goto another street. What about Sports Memorbilia? This case specifies EBAY as supporting illict sales, right, let's not hold the people actually selling the items accountible.