U.S. retail and tech giant Amazon identified and seized more than three million counterfeit products in 2021, according to the company’s second brand protection report, released Wednesday.
Amazon said this included products sent to its fulfilment centres and situations where the company worked with brands and law enforcement to find and shut down counterfeiters’ warehouses and facilities.
In its first brand protection report, released in May 2021 Amazon had said it detected more than two million fake products sent to its logistics centres in 2020.
In addition to functioning as a website selling its own goods, Amazon was also a platform for other vendors, which counterfeiters try to exploit to enter the market.
The company has taken steps to tackle this, for example by expanding checks for new merchant accounts being set up.
In the U.S., Britain and European Union countries, all applicants have to go through personal verification since last year.
Amazon’s Global Brand Relations director Anna Dalla Val said this acts as a deterrent and has led to the number of attempts to set up new accounts.
These new accounts being blocked by Amazon to drop from six million to 2.6 million within a year.
Existing merchants’ listings were also scanned automatically for signs of counterfeit products, she said.
Amazon also offers companies affected by product piracy the opportunity to register and report violations of their trademarks.
More than 700,000 brands participated in the programme in 2021, compared to more than 500,000 in 2020, Amazon said.
The brands reported around a quarter fewer infringements on average, which Amazon attributed to the success of its proactive measures. (dpa/NAN)