Press Release Summary = Intellectual property theft (brands, trademarks and
copyrights) surged to 36% of global counterfeiting during the month of February.
More than 95% of all counterfeit items seized by customs, law enforcement and brand
enforcement agents related to IP theft, accounting for $55 Million USD. As reported
by Gieschen Consultancy, the total value of fake items sold and seized was $76.2
Million from 268 incidents.
Press Release Body = Tuesday March 15, 2005 -- Calgary, Canada -- Based on the past
month of worldwide counterfeit enforcement activity (investigations, raids,
seizures, arrests, charges, convictions, sentences, civil litigation, public
announcements), as reported through the DOPIP Security Counterfeit Intelligence
Report, more than 268 incidents were analyzed from 48 countries.
The most profitable counterfeits (based on seizures and losses):
1. Clothing & Accessories, $38 Million, 21 incidents, average age of the
counterfeiter 33.
2. Entertainment & Software, $18.1 Million, 50 incidents, average age 32. (CDs,
DVDs, software, games)
3. Drugs, $12.9 Million, 8 incidents, average age 29. (medicine)
4. Financial Instruments, $4.3 Million, 96 incidents, average age 29. (currency,
checks, money orders, treasury bonds, credit/debit cards)
5. Other Goods, $1.1 Million, 4 incident, average age 38. (golf equipment, pottery,
gambling equipment)
6. Cigarettes, $0.9 Million, 3 incidents, average age 33.
7. Industrial Goods & Supplies (average age 25), Electrical Equipment & Supplies,
Food & Alcohol, Other Documents (average age 38), Identification (average age 36),
Computer Equipment & Supplies, $1 Million, 86 incidents.
For more information: http://www.goldsec.com/Security_Research.htm
The 82 most popular brands, brand owners and trademarks to counterfeit:
• Louis Vuitton (7.3% of all incidents), Nike (7.3%), Burberry (6.1%), Coach (6.1%),
Gucci (6.1%), Microsoft (6.1%), Chanel (3.7%), NFL (3.7%), Viagra (3.7%), Autodesk
(2.4%), Christian Dior (2.4%), FCUK (2.4%), Fendi (2.4%), Hugo Boss (2.4%), NBA
(2.4%), Pfizer (2.4%), Prada (2.4%).
• Less popular were: Callaway Golf, Canon, Cartier, Chicago bulls, Cleveland Golf,
Corel, Duracell, Gillette, Giorgia Armani, Honda, HP, Kaizer Chiefs, Kate Spade,
Lacoste, Lance Armstrong, Major League Basebal, Manchester United, Nissan, Oakley,
Oki, Oracle, Orlando Pirates, Oxford, Patriots, Ping, Pokeman, Rado, Rangers, Real
Madrid, Red Sox, Rockport, Rolex, Starter, Symantec, Tommy Hilfiger, Toyota,
Underwriters Laboratories, Yankees, and Zig-Zag.
In summarizing the months activity, Glen Gieschen, Managing Director of Gieschen
Consultancy stated "February is continuing the trend towards counterfeiting brands,
trademarks and copyrights which increased by more than 15% from January. Given that
a number of terrorist and criminal groups such as Al-Qaeda, ETA, Inagawa-kai,
Sanbonsugi-ikka, and Yamaguchi-gumi were involved in counterfeit activity in
February, this will continue to cause concern for governments, corporations and
consumers. Typically bogus items are made of inferior or poor quality components
which have caused significant harm or death to individuals. Cases involving
cellular phone batteries which exploded and burned children, bootleg liquor which
contained 200 times the acceptable methylated spirits killing dozens, condoms which
failed to protect against sexually transmitted diseases and contraception, and fake
botox and AIDS vaccines which caused deaths have become a reality. Other industries
are equall
y concerned with the use of aircraft or automotive parts such as brake pads, ball
bearings or filters which failed to work under normal conditions. Increasingly,
the threat of deliberately adulterated or spurious food products is fueling
concerns over agroterrorism and bioterrorism as the food supply has been shown to
be vulnerable to phony baby formula which killed dozens of children in China.
A record number of incidents were uncovered by brand enforcement personnel involving
copied products which used unauthorized trademarks and pirated work relating to
copyright infringement. Of the 82 brands identified, 17 brand owners accounted for
more than 69% of this activity indicating that those responsible for the
unauthorized reproductions are targeting specific brands and IP owners which market
their products globally.
In response, there is an increasing awareness of brand protection technologies and
intellectual property protection strategies. The use of digital rights management,
digital watermarks, document security, intelligence gathering, nanotechnology, RFID
(Radio Frequency Identification), and security printing are assisting in
anti-counterfeit and anti-piracy efforts. Combined with intellectual property
enforcement, IP owners are becoming more effective in reducing losses.
All counterfeit activity should be of concern as it fuels other crimes such as
terrorism, identity theft, fraud, forgery, smuggling, parallel trade, product
diversion, and a black market for a wide variety of knock off and imitation items.
Countries which are most active in reporting incidents are Italy ($18.7 Million),
USA ($15.5 Million), Spain ($14.5 Million), South Africa ($12.3 Million), Canada ($4
Million), Taiwan ($3.2 Million), Kenya ($1.7 Million), UK ($1.4 Million). China,
reported as the single largest manufacturer of counterfeit items, ranked 9th ($1.0
Million).
Compounding the problem is access to simple duplication methods which allow
counterfeiters to reproduce items without incurring a large expense. In some cases,
equipment has been obtained using fake ID, only to be used to perpetrate other
crimes such as counterfeiting checks or currency. The most common method are as
follows: Entertainment & Software, using CD or DVD burners; Financial Instruments,
using computers, scanners, printers, and copiers; Cigarettes, obtaining cigarette
manufacturing equipment; Identification, computers, printers, scanners, cameras, and
laminators.
Assisting terrorists and criminals in facilitating their crimes and avoiding
detection, fake identification posses another challenge. As the sophistication and
scope of the crimes increase the value of identification desired also increases from
drivers licenses and birth certificates to passports, visas and national identity
cards. 26% of global counterfeiting now involves the manufacturing of
identification. The most common forms of fake ID are passports (27%), drivers
licenses (18%), other government identification (10%), identity cards (9%), social
security cards (8.5%), birth certificates (6%), visas (6%). Other less common forms
are green cards, police and military identification, citizenship papers, home visit
permits, immigration papers, resident alien and registration cards. In reponse,
technologies such as biometrics, smart cards, RFID, identity management, and
federated identity are being deployed."
For more information: http://www.goldsec.com/Alleged_Counterfeit_Suspects_Entities.htm
• 48 Countries reported counterfeit activity in February: Australia, Bangladesh,
Bosnia, Brunei, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Cyprus, Czech Republic, France, Ghana,
Greece, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Latvia, Lebanon,
Liberia, Malaysia, Malta, Mexico, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Philippines, Portugal, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa,
South Korea, Spain, Taiwan, Turkey, UAE, Uganda, UK, USA, Vietnam, Yugoslavia.
The current months counterfeit activity: http://www.goldsec.com/
The full report of counterfeit activity for the month can be purchased from Gieschen
Consultancy.
About DOPIP SCI Reports
DOPIP is a powerful source of information regarding illegal activities such as
counterfeiting, forgery, product tampering and diversion. It provides current news
reports, information and analysis relating to document, product and intellectual
product security. Security technology providers, enforcement agencies, trade
organizations, and brand owners will find this information indispensable for
detection, deterrence and prevention. Standard or Premium Sources DOPIP SCI Reports
are available as an annual subscription for $295 USD and $835 respectively.
For more information visit http://www.goldsec.com/Security_Updates.htm.
About Gieschen Consultancy
Gieschen Consultancy, provides counterfeit intelligence analysis and security
research relating to documents, products and intellectual property. Gieschen
Consultancy educates clients regarding counterfeiting issues, and assists in
developing anti-counterfeiting, brand protection and enforcement solutions.
Providing the knowledge of the criminal Modus Operandi (methods of operation), legal
and political issues, security technology, industry reports and statistical
information, effective strategies can then be developed, implemented and monitored.
For more information visit http://www.gieschen.com/.