Fakes, Coming to a Store Near You 286
fishdan writes to tell us that while most Slashdotters have their own trusted sources for gear there is a growing concern that all consumers should look out for. According to PC World, more and more counterfeit hardware is coming to market each year. From the article: '...batteries aren't the only tech item that counterfeiters love. In October 2004, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials in Anchorage, Alaska, seized 20,000 suspected fake Memorex USB memory key thumb drives from Asia. And last year, Miami officials seized 900 allegedly phony laptops valued at $700,000. "Maybe it's a laptop, an MP3 player, or a component like a DVD drive--anything in the digital world can be counterfeited," says Therese Randazzo, a U.S. Customs Service counterfeiting expert.'"
I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)
From TFA:
Bogus cell phone batteries, shoddily made and potentially unsafe, are a specialty of counterfeiters. "It's one thing to buy a fake $30 Louis Vuitton bag on Canal Street in New York City. It's an entirely different matter when you buy a fake cell phone battery and it blows up"
So yes, lack of quality IS a problem - it's not just IP whine.
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
A battery exploding, while problematic, does not really impact the company being faked in a direct fashion. And they hold the stick for repression.
They just use the battery explosions as a banner to say "Hey, we are not evil and fighting for our beloved revenue. We fight for customer
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
But you raise a good point: If a fake was released that was much better than the original, would they still attack them? It's a legitimate question.
--
George Herriman's Krazy Kat [ignatzmouse.net]
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Most "real" Sony hardware is made in China anyway. I've got a Chinese-brand DVD player; works perfectly. And it plays counterfeit DVDs that Sony players refuse to....
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Your argument, while good, only fits a small number of cases where the fake could actually hurt someone. I fail to see how a memory stick can blow up and hurt someone.
A much better reason to discourage this type of piracy is simply because margins are already tight in the electronics world without forcing the few players that exist to fight for their money with people ripping them off. There are areas where I feel pirates play an important roll. Music, movie and clothes production spring to mind. Producti
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
First off music/movie and clothing "pirates" are really different creatures. Clothing pirates actually produce a product and then try to leech off of someone elses good name
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)
There is a reason to buy quality, and to be aware that a brand name does not necessarily mean quality.
In Denmark we had a case. A supermarket was selling "counterfeit" Puma shoes. The only difference between the cheap Puma and the full price Puma was, that the manufacturer had lost his Puma contract, but was still producing the same shoes.
Go for quality rather than brand names.
The best color you can buy is usually last year's
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
When you buy a product from a manufacturer, you as a buyer are protected by warranty laws, a counterfeiter can get away with selling stuff even if the quality is the same as the original for a lower price because they don't have to support you.
Counterfeiters do take away profits from the rightful owners of the product. Companies spend millions of dollars to develop a product and to appeal to a certain market. If counterfeiters were allowed to counterfeit, then companies would not develop products.
Also, how would like to buy an Intel computer but only to find that the insides are actually made by a Chinese knockoff company.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
here [heise.de] you can see a picture of a fake usb bluetooth adapter. as you can see the antenna is a dummy, the only antenna it has is "drawn" on the pcb. also the bluetooth stack is a different one.
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
This obviously has issues with the entire manufacturing process. anything that needed these parts now must be tested.
counterfeit stuff is almost certainly poor quality, possibly bordering on dangerous. it makes the most sense as you get maximum profits that way.
Further there is no accountability. A defective and dangerous product could harm people, thusly bringing lawsuits. These lawsuits would target, in this case, innocent corporations instead of outright dishonest ones. the lack of a need to care about the consumer at all makes counterfeitting electronics dangerous.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
A direct copy of a brand name product probably hasn't had any effort put in other than making it into a good copy.
A cheap product from china with a bizarre brand name made up by somebody who knows 10 words of english may actually have good engineering in it. At least that way you know exactly what you are getting.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Funny as I read that I was looking at the cover of my Cisco(tm)(r) branded power brick.
The thing has more chinese on it than english... btw. this is my third - the first two exploded.
So, in the interests of accuracy:
An expensive product from china with a bizarre brand name made up by somebody who knows 10 wor
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Just like car makers selling "genuine parts".
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Generally, yes, yes, and yes. Also, it's not so much about taking profits away from the rightful owners but a matter of trademark and copyright infringement. If it's a Lexan USB drive with a Memorex label on it, I don't think you're getting ripped off regarding quality and functionality. But generally, it's inferior products
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
As long as you the purchaser know they're counterfeit, and accept all the risks which go along with that (e.g. you
So where does the customer stand... (Score:2)
Re:So where does the customer stand... (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Informative)
There are dangers to this practise. In these cases the producer cannot be held accountable (because it's not know who it is), so they don't have an interest in quality control. Often, discarded parts (that
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
You probably mean the rightful manufacturer of the product. We're speaking about hardware here, so the owner would be the buyer, not the maker.
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
Another problem is when a device made in the same factory as the real deal (let's say a Toshiba laptop) is sold in the US as a real toshiba. To many people hey, it's a real toshiba, and it's half the price!
But part of the price of the REAL toshiba is the Quality Control that occurs along the line. Perhaps only 85% of all laptops made in that factory actually end up being accepted by toshiba as inventory, and the rest is set to be dismantled, scrapped or refurbished as something went wrong on the assembly line. So what do you get when you buy the fake toshiba?
You get one of the *already rejected* "toshibas" that was never meant to be released to the public. Not only was it never given a serial number that matches a toshiba-sold product so all warranty is out the window, it's already been rejected and defined as having problems. Made in the same factory, yes, but not the same quality as the final for-sale object.
Maybe you'll get lucky and get a solid machine that only has some case defects. Maybe you'll get a lemon that doesn't stay powered on for more than 15 minutes, has no warranty, and you still paid $400 for.
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Informative)
Sony branded ni-cads - might hold a charge ok for the first few uses...rapidly downhill from there. Who knows what is inside. Use your imagination, but remember to only consider materials that are easy to obtain, with low cost up front.
Sony branded 1gb USB microdrive - after one week...corrupted data. On and on...blank CDs, DVDs, SD cards....no end. If you get in with the shop vendors, they know what to avoid, and they won't sell you the bad stuff. I've learned how to spot most if it, but the odds are more than 50/50 you'll be buying fake, regardless of the outlet. Fake cosmetics, deodorants, medicines, shoes, clothes, watches...a small percentage are acutally high quality, just made after hours. But for the most part, the fakes are of lower quality than the originals.
How good are they at doing this? No joke, I've seen fake raw eggs. [danwei.org] Shell, egg white and yolk. No protein or edible matter whatsoever. Mostly off the shelf building materials. What kind of profit is there, when there is a market for a fake fresh chicken eggs?
Why is this so prevalent? Believe it or not, being able to copy an original is considered a test of ability. It is routine for one generation in China to test itself by attempting to duplicate something done by their ancestors. From fabrics to porcelin, it shows respect and skill by being able to reliably copy something that was first done over two thousand years ago.
Where is this headed? What better craftsmen, to really be the first to clone a human.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
how certain are you that those new brake pads the shop fitted to your car the other week weren't just compressed cardboard? or that bolt holding the engine in place on the wing of the airplane you're boarding today was really manufactured by one of Boeing's proper suppliers. Those are items currently being counterfeited that really scare me.
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
A lot of people here are having the standard knee-jerk reaction of saying only corporate profits benefit by cutting out fakes but thats just not the case. If a compan builds a brand name not with marketing but build a brand name with actually releasing a
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Informative)
the Intel 80386 Microprocessor in the early 80's then the 486.
As intel could make the CPU fast enough for the Demand and outsource to AMD to manufacture them.
AMD started selling the exactly identical chip as Intel
(they had the blueprints afterall and
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)
Depends on what your definition of "fake" is. It is well known that manufacturers of, say, memory chips producing under contract/license for known brands sell surplus and not-tested-to-make-sure-the-chips-are-within-spec stock to the grey market. Which is ok, as long as there is no contract/license agreements barring the factory from doing so and the memory chips sold in this manner aren't passed off as "known brand" chips.
Rebadging does happen, but whether it is done by the factory or by people buying surplus is a different matter.
The Intel/AMD story is a bit different. When IBM put together the IBM PC they had to rush to get it out the door to compete with the myriad of personal computers that were showing up on the market. Instead of taking the traditional route of designing everything in-house, they did something that at the time was very unusual for IBM. They went outside IBM to pick the components to build the machine, including the 8088 from Intel.
IBM was then a powerhouse, and Intel was in comparison small fry. IBM did not want to depend on a single source for the components used in the IBM PC, so in order for Intel to get the contract they had to license the x86 to a second source - AMD.
AMD was at first a second source producer of Intel designed x86 CPUs (8086, 8088, Am286). Intel considered the licence only valid up to the 80286, so they cancelled the agreement in 1986 and lawsuit(s?) ensued. AMD kinda sorta won, and starting with the Am386 in 1991 they have designed and manufactured their own x86 compatible CPUs.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
It was ~$15 for the third-party battery and ~$90 for the motorola one.
I'm not sure it counts as counterfeit though since it was totally clear that it was not made by motorola.
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Informative)
I know that's true of Lithium Ion batteries (hence why they're always packaged in a flat plastic square - the electronics are included in the battery pack
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Interesting)
Li-Ion/Li-Poly cells are the dangerous ones. Basically they can reach a run-away condition very easily, and lithium is *very* reactive. They can ignite if punctured, charged too fast, over-charged, or if they drop below a certain voltage and are then charged at normal rates. They will also swell/burst if over-discharged or over-heated. Most Li-Poly/Li-Ion packs include a circuit with a thermal cutoff to prevent over-heating, a circuit to prevent shorting/excessive-discharge-rates, and a circuit that isolates the pack if it drops below a safe voltage (usually around 2.5-2.8 volts per cell).
I did purchase a pair of Li-poly batteries for a cell phone, which were no-name imports. They did not have any cutoff circuitry, and I suspect could have been nasty if they wandered out of spec (either through abuse or a defective phone). I used them with no problems though, but I think I'd reconsider, given what I know now about Lithium cells.
That said, the circuitry required for Lithium cells is becoming cheaper everyday (the functionality is avaiable in a single chip), so I wouldn't be surprised if "decent" third-party units do have the desired safety functionality.
D.
Wow I'm glad he's an "expert" (Score:5, Insightful)
Last time I checked there captain obvious anything in the analog world can be counterfeited as well. Basically anything can be counterfeited. If this guy counts as an expert I'd hate to see a n00b.
Re:Wow I'm glad he's an "expert" (Score:2)
Re:Wow I'm glad he's an "expert" (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe he's a counterfeit expert?
Act now to stop hardware counterfeiting (Score:5, Funny)
P.O. Box 12345
Hometown, USA 12345
Please note that due to cost concerns, your hardware cannot be returned. Thanks and if you include your email address I'll let you know if it's counterfeit.
(just a joke...please don't actually send me anything cuz that address is extreme bogusness)
Re:Act now to stop hardware counterfeiting (Score:2)
I used to run a dispach system for on road service. Occasionally we would inject a test job "Mr Test T Test requires a new Test for his Toyota Test at 1 Test Street Test town" or similar and most of the time the job would get sent out into the real world.
I suggest you set up a real address and make off with the loot. It can hardly be less honest than selling advertising space by the pixel on a single page website.
Re:Act now to stop hardware counterfeiting (Score:2)
When you make your second million, drop me a postcard.
Re:Act now to stop hardware counterfeiting (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Act now to stop hardware counterfeiting (Score:2, Funny)
Apparently, one of the big reasons they en
Is this the real /. (Score:2, Funny)
OK, so how do we mod _this_ reply? (Score:2)
Wait till you see... (Score:4, Interesting)
Fake down blankets stuffed with shit polyesters.
Now hear this, fake EGGS. Yes you heard right. What mogglers my bind was how on earth could you make eggs cheaper than collecting from chickens. The fake eggs were obviously inedible, but will crack and pour just like a real egg, with yolks and stuff.
The famous fake gucci's and LV's are old news.
Latest that came in from a buddy who works in shenzhen was that he rode in a fake mercedes benz. They copied all contours and instead of the tri-star, it's a 5 pointed-star (China)! Cool eh.
Re:Wait till you see... (Score:2)
Tell me, exactly what does moggle your bind?
rode in a fake mercedes benz
A company here was putting Ferrari-like fibreglass shells on to TA22 Celica bodies. This was about 20 years ago. They got taken to court of course.
Thanks for the soy sauce story. I will feel real happy about my wife's cooking now. After the Dec 26 2004 tsunami there was a run on fish based sauce in Malaysia because people thought it would start to contain human tissue because fish feed on bodies. Your version sounds
Re:Wait till you see... (Score:2, Informative)
Dupe? (Score:2, Funny)
factories in China just keep production runs going (Score:2, Informative)
Re:factories in China just keep production runs go (Score:2)
These factories are not illegally producing the product if they are under contract to the license holder. They are guilty illegal distribution. These grey market products have been around in the clothing area since the beginning of designer clothes. Now with ebay and internet stores, there is a distribution outlet for technology hard goods that di
Re:factories in China just keep production runs go (Score:2)
I gladly buy fake high intensity White LED's all the time at around $0.06 each compared to the insane markup of around $).99 each in quantity here in the states. I buy packs of 1000 a couple times a year to feed my habit of modifying LEd flashlights into insane levels (I have a sharper image led floodlight that was modified from 16 led's to 50! it is now painful for people 1/2 a mile away) as well as making cash for my electronics projects by selling them at $0.25 each undercutting the local Rats
This speaks pretty poorly for online sales... (Score:2)
Re:This speaks pretty poorly for online sales... (Score:2)
I have to wonder how far they went to get a low price; I don't know about you, but I've seen plenty of web sites that look like they were put together by a 12 year old with attention span issues, and I wouldn't put my credit card anywhere near them, however cheap they were...
In a decade or so of buying online, I've had a CPU that arrived dead (squished, in fact; the packaging AMD had put it and the heatsink in had cracked, and the heatsink had crushed it), a
REAL goods, FAKE labels (Score:5, Interesting)
Do Memorex even make USB drives, or do they simply buy them in from Asian and stick their badge on them?
"Miami officials seized 900 allegedly phony laptops valued at $700,000. "Maybe it's a laptop, an MP3 player, or a component like a DVD drive--anything in the digital world can be counterfeited," says Therese Randazzo, a U.S. Customs Service counterfeiting expert.'"
I bet they were *real* laptops and *real* mp3 players, the only difference was the label. What you're saying is they can fake *labels*. But that's just because the USA has become a fake brand country, companies license a brand like Polaroid or Caterpillar, buy in cheap Asian crap, stick a "Polaroid" badge on it and charge loads more money because people think they're buying American.
Who cares if those fake brands get pirated, since its the difference between an overprice Asian product and a cheap Asian product, it's still jobs in Asia.
They should tackle false origin of goods labelling instead, since that's the cause of jobs being lost in USA and Europe. How can an Italian shoe maker compete with companies which appear to be Italian luxury show makers, but are just fake Asian brands with some minor finishing in Italy?
Re:REAL goods, FAKE labels (Score:2)
a) Using that whole fine hand crafted aesthetic to create a look which cannot be functionally duplicated by someone making 500 pieces a day with no specialized training or
b) going into an industry where the above is actually possible, because any industry where it isn't is doomed in Italy and everywhere else in the first world, just as it
Brand Italy (Score:2)
If brand work for companies, then why not for countries? Isn't French cheese worth paying more for, because they don't sell French reprocessed Cheddar!
Isn't Italian hand made shoes better because Italy doesn't make crappy cheap shoes so you're less likely to get a crappy cheap shoe if you buy Italian!
"Made in Italy" has value just like any other brand. The problem is they don't protect that brand, they protect this fak
Re:REAL goods, FAKE labels (Score:2)
His final sentence could have read "anything in the world can be counterfeited." without losing any meaning what-so-ever, considering that the items in question are real, tangible goods. The throwing in of the word 'digital' just seems intent on d
Re:REAL goods, FAKE labels (Score:4, Interesting)
I generally agree with your sentiment about Western Consumers getting sucked into overpaying for cheap crap because of a label (CK clothes instantly spring to mind).
However - I do actually think trademark is one area of 'intellectual property' that helps consumers.
If I buy a laptop that has "AMD Sempron 3000+" written on it, I would like to *know* that that's what it is - not an 900MHz Intel Celeron. Similarly, I want the video memory to be whats advertised, etc etc etc.
Who cares if those fake brands get pirated, since its the difference between an overprice Asian product and a cheap Asian product, it's still jobs in Asia.
Sometimes you do not get a rebranded equivilant, but something that is completely inferior to what you expected.
I would be extemely pissed off if I bought one of the Fake AMD CPUs [over-clock.com] that were going around a while ago, to find it overclocked, ran hotter, and had a shorter lifespan that it should.
Same thing, look at these examples (Score:2)
Agreed, but isn't this the exact same thing:
You're being sold "foo" when in reality it's "foobar".
In my example, "foo" is Italian Made Designer Shoe, and "foobar" is Chinese Made shoe imported into Italy.
In your example, "foo" is an AMD Sempron and "foobar" is an Intel Celeron.
In both cases it's not
Re:Same thing, look at these examples (Score:2)
You're being sold "foo" when in reality it's "foobar".
In my example, "foo" is Italian Made Designer Shoe, and "foobar" is Chinese Made shoe imported into Italy.
If you indeed bought a shoe that says "Italian Made" that was actually made in China, then your example does match mine.
However that is not the case - these shoes will say prominently "Italian designed" or similar, but have in smaller print "Made in China".
My theoretical laptop does not have "Designed like
Not all trademark infringements are so serious (Score:2)
So it's a matter of degrees, what I'm after for this current round of counterfeiting laws is strong origin of goods laws, and the counterfeiting to concentrate on origin of goods. So that the origin of goods is stuck right there on the advert, the top of the box etc.
"There is a huge difference between some advertising that is deceptive about the country of origin & fr
Re:Not all trademark infringements are so serious (Score:2)
1) Memorex buys Beijing 'Chung Brand' USB stick and sells it labelled as made by Memorex.
2)Fred Bloggs buys Beijing 'Chung Brand' USB stick and sells it labelled as made by Memorex.
It doesn't work like that - it works like this:
1) Memorex buys Beijing 'Chung Brand' USB stick, performs QA on it, discards 20% due to deficiences and sells it labelled as made by Memorex (with 100% markup)
2)Fred Bloggs buys Beijing 'Chung Brand' USB stick and sells it labelled as
Re:Not all trademark infringements are so serious (Score:2)
If the counterfeiting laws regarding regular merchandise are as screwed up as they are for drugs (controlled by the FDA) they could both say Memorex and be purchased from the same supplier and labeled on behalf of Memorex.
Memorex (or any other company) could then claim the packaging is wrong (as it was inteded for a different market) and say it is counterfeit.
Drugs are determined to be counterfeit if the packaging is not the exact same as the packaging registered with the FDA. Even if they are package
Re:Not all trademark infringements are so serious (Score:3, Insightful)
Fred Bloggs buys Beijing 'Chung Brand' USB stick and sells it labelled as made by Memorex.
1. The person who buys Fred Bloggs stick is being deceived, because it's not Memorex.
2. But then so is the person who buys Memorex because it's really 'Chung Brand'.
From what I've been told, it doesn't work quite like that. That the sticks come from the same factory does not mean that they have the same quality.
1) Memorex does a contr
Bad News Dude.... (Score:3, Interesting)
I can't speak specifically to shoes, but I can speak for sweaters. Production has largely moved out of shops in Italy, and into (Pakistan, Malaysia,
The problem
Premium end of the market (Score:2)
Price isn't everything.
Do you pay more for a BMW than a Fiat? Fiat makes good cars sometimes, but they've also made bad ones and are devalued as a result. BMW compete at the premium end and avoid making bad cars. People do pay more and do by BMWs.
Fiat = China
BMW = Italy France...
Re:REAL goods, FAKE labels (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm suggesting extra protection (Score:2)
We already have counterfeit laws on the books, which is how these goods were seized.
I'm suggesting extra protection for brands in the form of protection from false 'country of origin goods' because that's where I think the jobs have gone.
So genuines Italian Shoe makers can use "Made In Italy" while shoe importers or shoe finishers would have to honestly put "Made in China" on their labels. They don't have to compete with brands pretending to be
Windows (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Windows (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Windows (Score:3, Insightful)
Cisco is plagued by counterfeits (Score:5, Informative)
A Cisco dual channel T1 controller, part VWIC-2MFT-T1 is $2,000 new list price. A small reseller will pay 70% of list or about $1,400 for it in distribution, while a large reseller might only pay $1,100 or so. Below we see a tinyurl link to an Ebay auction for a new boxed unit at only $227 or 11.3% of list price. I guarantee if you contact the seller you can get six dozen of them for the same price.
http://tinyurl.com/ak9by [tinyurl.com]
This has gone on and on and on and on for the last two years, destroying the value of used Cisco gear we pull from customers and making it almost impossible to buy a used/refurbished card without running into this stuff.
I found out about this sort of thing the hard way. I got a *fantastic* deal on six new in the box Cisco 1721 routers. It wasn't so fantastic when I had to explain to my biggest customer that half of the machines they owned couldn't be registered for service because Cisco had them listed as in service in South America. Oh, and they failed, one by one, with mysterious problems not attributeable to hardware or software
Foo on all counterfeiters. They should be given counterfeit lifesaving drugs while riding in an ambulance equipped with counterfeit brake pads on their way to a hospital where they'll be cared for by a doctor who is really a drunken paramedic who thought it'd be fun to be a trauma surgeon for a day. If they live through that then they should be placed in a real live jail and periodically offered counterfeit parole papers to sign.
Buyer beward dude (Score:2)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/1261060.stm [bbc.co.uk]
I don't think a Cisco card or two on eBay from a seller in Beijing are exactly a big deal personally, and I wonder why you imagined Cisco would register and support routers you bought from China on eBay???
Re:Cisco is plagued by counterfeits (Score:4, Insightful)
Any chinese company can build this kind of product, as the related technologies (and component prices) can be complex as manufacturing an ADSL modem.
But that's Cisco TODAY. Back in The Day when the components and technologies necessary to build a T1 signal interface were really expensive, their prices at least made some sense. Today the amount of signal processing necessary for a full-featured ADSL modem is larger than for this kind of communications card.
Today's Cisco is just a seller of overpriced commodity hardware.
Re:Cisco is plagued by counterfeits (Score:4, Interesting)
If Cisco outsources the manufacture of the hardware how can it possibly believe that the manufacturer won't run an extra X copies off the line after they've run Cisco's? Sure, your contracts may prohibit that but when the cost vs what Cisco charges the end user is so great, the temptation for someone at the manufacturing line is going to be pretty high. Especially if they figure they'll sell the goods in a market where Cisco isn't.
There are reasons on-shore companies used to do the manufacturing themselves. This is one of them.
Outsourcing may be cheaper in the short run but Cisco is beginning to learn what the long-run costs are.
Re:Cisco is plagued by counterfeits (Score:3, Interesting)
These cards are the bane of support people.
Fake laptops are almost indistinguishable (Score:3, Funny)
I've got a fake Music CD (Score:4, Funny)
Not a major consumer issue (Score:2, Insightful)
You buy from a respectable outlet, and you use the product. If it fails, you bring it back to get it replaced. If they discover its a conterfeit, you get it replaced with the real thing (or sue if they are not forthcoming). Issue lies between outlet and
Re:Not a major consumer issue (Score:2)
Fake Gilette razors (Score:3, Informative)
Trouble is that with globalization going on as it is, it is not unheard of for an import/export company to buy wholesale an X amount of razors, to sell most of it through their normal channels and to sell some excess surplus on the international market. Buyers would normally buy from the manufacturer, but it is hard to resist buying some of the wholesale surplus of others.
With globalization increasing, creating a bigger marketplace and smaller margins, I would expect to see more fakes for two reasons:
- more superfluous relationships between supply and demand instead of the traditional 1 on 1 manufacturer, wholesaler, retailer relationships. Making it easier to slip something in and be unnoticed.
- larger markets make it more profitable to inject fake goods into the economy, by creating larger demands for products, so that the margins combined with volume creates a large enough incentive for crime to seize the chance.
Re:Fake Gilette razors (Score:2)
I'm not sure that's such a good example.
First, razor blades are available in analog form only. And second, I doubt you'll get much sympathy from anyone who uses disposable blades (which is just about everyone) and is forced to pay ridiculous prices for them. Similarly, I doubt anyone consider
Counterfeit Hardware (Score:4, Insightful)
For instance, imagine you buy a wireless router from ebay, which the seller has pre-installed with trojan firmware and comes with a packet sniffer, bulk mailing software pre-installed, ftp server, password grabber etc. The best part is, most people trust their routers implicitly so don't bother checking them from the outside world. Some people then disable their software firewalls once they have a router available.
Another great idea would be a network printer with a trojan payload.
U.S. Critical Vulnerability (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft does it too... (Score:2)
Sort of makes me think of Sir Mix-A-Lot's 'Swap Meet Louie'
"Your OS might have windows like a Mac, but in Redmond that ain't Jack."
How about brand products with fake labels? (Score:3, Interesting)
Would this be considered counterfeit as well?
Elevators too (Score:5, Interesting)
The elevator company had no record that they had an elevator installed there.
When the technicians got there, they couldn't fix anything, because the elevator wasn't really theirs. It was a knock-off!
Growing concern? (Score:3, Interesting)
It was only a matter of time before counterfeiting struck its hand on the electronics industry. There's already counterfeit electrical parts, medical supplies, you name it. The thing is about counterfeits coming from China is that there are thousands of factories that can produce the exact same product easily. Factories are next door to each other in Guangdong/Shenzen -- getting the blueprints for products is only a matter of knowing someone from another factory and getting a copy for you to produce. So it may not be so much an issue as having a counterfeit phone, but having a phone produced in a different factory.
The truth of the matter is, the '100% mirror quality' fake Louis Vuitton's that walk their way past you in the mall are impossible to tell from the real ones. The quality is the exact same, and the materials and craftmanship the same. So for small, (mostly) meaningless electronics, counterfeit does not impose much of a problem to the consumer. For health-critical devices or medicines, it's a different story. That's why there's so much more focus on stopping counterfeit medicine than Louis Vuitton.
Deadly fakes (Score:3, Interesting)
However, fakes aren't stopping at clothes and fashion. The problem is that if you don't fight counterfeit very efficiently, you soon see them appear in places where reliability and traceability are paramount. What about bad components crashing a mission-critical system? Fake brake pads in your car that overheat and fail? Or even worse, fake antibiotics and aviation parts? All these are happening today and are a major concern.
One way to fight counterfeits is to ship items with an RFID tag that is queried at each step of the shipping and traced back to the originating factory. Of course, pirates will soon start counterfeiting tags too, so the system has to be designed to prevent fake and duplicate numbers.
I personally must be naive because I cannot conceive making fake drugs or couterfeit airplane parts -- could you endanger thousands of lives to make a quick buck? Obviously, such scruples belong to a gentler era, such as the Hun invasions.
Re:Deadly fakes (Score:3, Informative)
Mission critical systems normally procure their products directly from the manuf
What a bunch of FUD (Score:4, Informative)
Yeah except it costs the same (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah "fakes" can work. In a way the PC your sitting behind right now is a "fake". Unless your a rich bastard sitting behind a IBM or Apple machine.
This article is however not about those kind of fakes. It is where the buyer presumes he is buying the real deal often for the real price. That is not good.
Same with software, you can hold a lengthy argument about software piracy but when I pay full price for a software package I would expect to get a real offical copy.
By all means, make cheap memory or hd or mp3 players but don't try to pass it of as a superior product and charge the same money.
Re:Yeah except it costs the same (Score:2)
However, I gotta argue with you on the 50% less for 50% of the cost bit.
Say a branded laptop costs 1200 and lasts 6 years. Now, say the cheapy fake is 600 for 3 years. Assume factors other than price and lifespan constant.
Three years down the line, Moore's law states that the computers coming out will be four times the nice.
The person who bought the cheapy fake now is forced into buying a much better computer (his old one failed for one reason or another. Le
Re:Cheap fake or the real thing? (Score:2, Insightful)
This isn't talking about cheap fakes. Instead, you're getting unreliable fakes for the brand price. You're getting ripped off twice as much. That's not good at all, no matter what spin you put on it. I think you're confusing this with just getting stuff dirt cheap from China. The article focuses on the fakes commonly being put in place of the real goods.
Re:Cheap fake or the real thing? (Score:2)
Fools thing think that buying a Sony branded camcorder battery means it's better than the same battery from young-fung-shoo batteries that are the SAME sony battery but with no labels and a black sticker over the "sony" molded in the case.
I get them as well as Canons greay market batteries because the plastic is deformed or something else makes them unsuitable to gouge the consumer at full price but work just fine and simply do not look perfect.
Cano
Re:But does it run Linux? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:don't by stuff from men in vans (Score:2)