Alibaba’s Jack Ma wants serious jail time for counterfeiters


HONG KONG: Billionaire Alibaba-founder Jack Ma wants China’s top lawmakers to come down harder on fake goods -- the very same plea voiced by global brands who’ve accused the e-commerce service of harbouring knock-offs.

The Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. chairman appealed to the National People’s Congress convening in Beijing this week to penalise counterfeiters as harshly as drunk drivers.

In an open letter published on his Weibo account Tuesday, Ma said enforcement had been too lax and the authorities should raise maximum prison sentences and other penalties to deter illegal profiteers.

The unusual public entreaty follows persistent criticism that Ma and his company haven’t done enough to swat copycats. In a major embarrassment, Alibaba was again labelled a “notorious market” last year by the U.S. Office of the Trade Representative -- just four years after escaping the label. It’s a list that includes torrent website Pirate Bay and flea markets from Brazil to Nigeria.

“We need to fight counterfeits the same way we fight drunk driving,” Ma wrote in his letter.

“No one company can do it alone. The existing laws are lagging, failing to impose actual threats on the behavior of counterfeiters and leave far too much room for cheating.”

Winning the trust of foreign brands is key to realizing Ma’s ambitions of global expansion. But Alibaba still fends off accusations about its unwillingness or inability to eradicate fakes from its platforms, the subject of a lawsuit filed in 2015 by Kering SA.

The Chinese e-commerce giant has countered by saying it’s doing all it can to take down fakes. It removed 380 million product listings and closed about 180,000 stores on its Taobao platform in the 12 months to August, the company said in a letter to the USTR.

In this week’s missive, Ma says there’s been plenty of rhetoric but little decisive action from authorities on combating fake goods, which he compared with the hazardous smog infamous for enveloping Beijing and other Chinese cities.

Knock-offs remain rampant throughout the country as a result, he said. He even compared ridding China of fakes to fighting the famed Battle on Shangganling Mountain, where Chinese forces were said to have beaten back the U.S. and South Korean military during the Korean War.

“Alibaba’s shifting the burden to lawmakers, and it might help drive some changes in China’s criminal legal system,” said Cao Lei, director of the China E-Commerce Research Center in Hangzhou.

“They hope to use a few cases to kill a chicken to scare the monkeys.”

Outdated laws -- such as ones dismissing criminal responsibility for manufacturers who produce goods worth less than 50,000 yuan (US$7,200) -- render Alibaba’s own efforts to curb counterfeits futile, Ma argued. Fewer than 10% of the leads the company has provided to authorities led to a successful criminal prosecution, he added.

“There is a lot of bark around stopping counterfeits, but no bite,” Ma said. “This reality only encourages more people to produce and sell fake goods.” - Bloomberg

Save 30% OFF The Star Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 9.73/month

Billed as RM 9.73 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.63/month

Billed as RM 103.60 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Business News

Wasco to gain from transition to renewables
CPO prices to stay range-bound in February
Stiff competition to reshape auto landscape
Steel Hawk unit secures Sabah contract
Oxford Innotech wins RM4.8mil data centre job
MAG makes new executive leadership appointments
KIP-REIT expects higher traffic at its malls
Glovemakers shift focus as China floods markets
Strata overhang to ease if prudence continues
Carimin acquires 19.5% stake in Sealink International for RM40mil

Others Also Read