eBay Told To Pay $61M to Fashion make for Fakes

A French commercial court Monday ordered eBay Inc. to pay more than $61 million to a high-end fashion company considering counterfeit goods were sold on the auction site.

The fashion company, LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, is home to such prestigious qualitys as Louis Vuitton, Givenchy, Fendi, Emilio Pucci and Marc Jacobs, and had complained that it was hurt by the sale of knockoff bags and clothes on eBay.

Pierre Godet, an adviser to LVMH Chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault, said the Paris court’s decision was “an reply to a particularly serious question, on whether the World Wide Web is a free-for-all for the most hateful, parasitic practices.”

EBay countered that LVMH is trying to crack down on Net auctions merely considering it is uncomfortable with the business model, which tends to cut out the middleman.

“If counterfeits seem on our site, we take them down swiftly,” eBay spokeswoman Sravanthi Agrawal said. “But today’s ruling is not about

counterfeits. 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 every day.”

She said eBay hopes to appeal the ruling.

The case pit two pillars of their industries — one old, one new — in a country whose courts often challenge Web companies on matters protected elsewhere by freedom of speech. For example, French courts have ordered U.S. auction sites to keep Nazi paraphernalia away from French eyes.

The ruling came down against eBay on two fronts. The court faulted the online company for “guilty negligence,” for not doing decent to prevent fake goods from being sold on its site. The court plus ruled that eBay was responsible for the “illicit sale” of perfumes from the LVMH empire, which can be sold only through the brands’ “selective distribution networks.”

High-end fashion companies…

Orginal post by Top Tech News

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