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Reading task
3. Quickly scan the text below and underline examples of counterfeiting. Complete the text with the following sentences: a) However, brand owners often willingly hand over production masters to counterfeiters without realising it. b) As long as there is a market for a product the copycats will, imitate it. c) Peter Lowe, head of the CIB, reckons that some $25bn worth of counterfeit goods, are traded each year over the internet. d) In recent years the counterfeiters have gone from strength to strength. e) Some of these, borrowed from security devices developed for use on dollar bills, are clearly visible and are intended to help consumers distinguish fakes from genuine goods. f) Procter & Gamble reckons it spends $3m a year fighting the copycats.
*Copyright infringement
Counterfeiting is on the increase. Companies ignore it at their peril. To most people, counterfeiting means defrauding. (Such rights are legally cdv- forged currency. But counterfeiters ered by patents (for inventions), copyright (for artistic works and software), most people, counterfeiting means forged currency. But counterfeiters are copying an ever-widening range of products. For some time they have been churning out imitation designer fashion, software and CDs. Now they are copying medicines, mobile phones, food and drink, car parts and even tobacco. 1) …. 2) …. New technology has broadened the range of goods that are vulnerable to copying. It has dramatically improved their quality, as well as lowering their cost of production. Where once counterfeits were cheap and shoddy imitations of the real thing, today their packaging and contents (especially for digital products such as software, music CDs and DVDs) often mean they are almost indistinguishable from the genuine article. A counterfeit, by definition, is something that is copied or imitated without the perpetrator having the right to do it and with the purpose of deceiving or trademarks (for words, pictures, symbols and industrial designs) and other forms of intellectual-property protection. Counterfeiting is as diverse as any legal business, ranging from back-street sweatshops to full-scale factories. Counterfeiters often get their goods by bribing employees in a company with a valuable brand to hand over manufacturing moulds or master disks for them to copy. 3) ….. One of the most frustrating problems for brand owners is when their licensed suppliers and manufacturers “over-run” production lines without permission and then sell the extra goods on the side. Distribution networks can be as simple as a stall in the street, or a shop on the other side of the world. The internet has been a great help to counterfeiters, giving them detailed information about which goods to copy and allowing them to link consumers and suppliers with ease. 4 …. Counterfeiting is not a victimless crime. For a start, legitimate businesses lose sales because of competition from counterfeiters. If their brand loses value (because it is seen as less exclusive or is confused with shoddy imitations), there is a long-term threat to profitability. In addition, firms have to bear the cost of anti-counterfeiting measures. 5) …. One strategy that companies increasingly use is to load their vulnerable products with ant-counterfeiting features. 6) ….. Companies also use these features, primarily to help them track their products through the supply chain and to distinguish genuine articles from fakes, especially should they need to take the copycats to court. But.ho amount of effort will ever completely stop the copycats. For as long as there is consumer demand, companies will find that imitation is the severest form of flattery. 4. Read the text again and answer the following questions. 1) What role has technology played in the expansion of counterfeiting? 2) How do counterfeiters often obtain their production masters? 3) What are the distribution networks for counterfeit products? 4) What effects does counterfeiting have on legal businesses? Date: 2015-09-24; view: 1660; Нарушение авторских прав |