Take a trip to Rome, Madrid, London.. Any major capital in Europe at least, and you'll see the knockoffs. Products of dubious origin, (usually Chinese) with names like Adadis, Ray-Ben, Louis Button and Calvim Klain, which are displayed on mats on the pavement for easy transportation if any police happen to be in the area.
Because, for some reason, brands are super important to us humans, many small businesses will seek to boost their image and profile by associating themselves with something more recognizable. Piracy is a crime and while some businesses blatantly do not care, others go to hilariously ridiculous lengths to try and get away with it!
We here at Bored Panda have created a list of times when businesses did their best to grab some of the glory of the bigger brands, often failing with amusing consequences. Scroll down below to check it out for yourself, and let us know what you think in the comments!
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Had To Do A Double Take
Counterfeiting and piracy are a form of theft that has been steadily growing in recent years, reaching an estimated value of up to US$917 billion a year for the illegal trade in goods alone, according to the International Chamber of Commerce. The global value of digital piracy in movies, music and software reached a further US$213 billion in 2015.
Counterfeiting has a damaging effect on business, the economy and the general population. Think of the health risks when taking a counterfeit medicine, for example, or using a product that hasn't been subject to rigorous healthy and safety standards. It's alway best to avoid counterfeits where possible!
They're Crappy, But Flattering
I Saw This Movie Once
According to Lapixa, more than half (51.66%) of all counterfeits came from China, but were also produced in Southeast Asia (9.04%) and Eastern Europe (4.47%). The production costs in these countries are low due to the use of cheap source materials and poor working conditions, furthermore costs for development and marketing basically do not exist.
79 percent of all companies are affected by product piracy, even several times a year. The product counterfeiting occurs across all sectors and ranges from handbags to electronic devices to drugs, machines and entire industrial plants.
When Hollywood Steals Your Idea
Pikado'h!
Preventing counterfeiting is not easy, as the laws against it are full of loopholes and are often loosely enforced. Stricter laws are difficult to pass, because of fears that they will stifle creativity and allow bigger companies to bankrupt smaller designers with copyright infringement claims. How close in design does something have to be to infringe on your copyright? What are you allowed to copyright? Adidas claims the 3 stripes for example, but how do you stop a company using a similar design with 4 stripes? There are many grey areas.
Exact replicas are different however, with intellectual property laws ostensibly providing strong protection against this.
Found This In Vietnam. Beautiful
Nothing Is Possible In China
There are different ways to protect your intellectual property. Melwani & Chan LLP, a New York City Shareholder Rights & Intellectual Property law firm, give a brief overview on their website:
"Copyright protection is generally not available to a clothing designer for the garment itself," they write. However, copyright protection is available for a print/or design pattern and the two-dimensional sketch."
"Why is copyright protection available for the sketch and not available for a garment? Copyright protection is usually denied to clothing on the grounds that they are considered useful articles. Copyright will only apply when the article’s expressive design component is separable from its useful function. Since clothing is considered a useful article, a court will generally take the view that a garment’s expressive component cannot be separated either physically or conceptually."
"A fashion designer seeking copyright protection from a knock-off designer must convince a judge that either the item of clothing is not functional or that its artistic design is separable from its utilitarian purpose. A court is unlikely to view the garment itself as not being utilitarian. However, courts will give copyright protection to the design pattern itself and/or the two-dimensional sketch, since they are considered pictorial works."
"A distinction should be drawn between a garment and fashion accessories such as a piece of jewelry, since jewelry is generally considered to be non-utilitarian, and therefore eligible for copyright protection as pictorial and/or sculptural work."
These Knockoff Jordans Gave Michael A Great Ass
Finally, A Brand That Totally Represents My View Towards Life
This is what you should wear in those times of frustration....
"A patent is granted for a new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter and it must advance the prior art in a way that that is non-obvious. A design in fashion is generally not considered a process, machine, manufacture or a composition of matters. Occasionally a design patent will be granted to a designer to protect the appearance of a fabric, garment, handbag, eyeglasses, etc. For example, Burberry has a design patent for its trench coat."
"Even if courts allow a fashion design to be patented, the amount of time it takes to acquire a patent makes this process impractical for most designers. A United States Patent and Trademark Office application can takes years to review and only about half of them are granted a patent and by then the garment would most likely be out-of-season."
"In some cases, pursuing a utility patent may make sense for a designer. For example, if they had invented a new fabric such as Goretex® or created a new technology, such as method for dyeing garments."
Just Yelp For Help
Looks A Bit... Phoney Doesn't It
"A trademark is any word, name, symbol, device, or combination thereof that is used by a merchant used to identify their goods and distinguish them from those manufactured and sold by other merchants. For example, Louis Vuitton’s “LV” logo or Chanel’s “Double C” logo are trademarks. Trademark protection in the United States is very strong and potentially infinite in length, as long as the mark is being used in commerce to designate the source of the goods."
"The key to determining if another designer is infringing on a trademark is the likelihood that ordinary consumers in the marketplace would confuse the original trademark and the allegedly infringing trademark. For example, Adidas won a 305 million dollar judgment against Payless Shoes in 2008 for selling two and four stripe shoes that looked very similar to Adidas’s three stripe shoes."
So it turns out that using 4 stripes can get you into trouble after all! Especially if your company can afford good lawyers like those at Melwani & Chan LLP. Scroll down below to see the rest of the list, and let us know what you think in the comments!
The New Spinoff Sounds Delicious
Found In Costa Rica
I Love These
Aids
Why Get The North Face When You Can Get The Huge Mountain
My Friend And I Died Laughing In The Store - Seen In Taiwan
Laundry
Watch Out Microsoft, Michael Bindows Is Comming
Would You Like A Oreo? Nah I'd Rather Have A
Infinitiy War Is The Biggest Crossover Event In Histor-
Another Great Find In China
Ordered This From A Chinese Company On Amazon And Thought You Would Like It
I Choose You, Chikapu!
There's a demon quality here that is definitely under utilized in most licensed Pikachu merch.
Can’t Decide Where To Buy From
Trans Boy
I Found A Japanese Knockoff Of The Movie “It”
According to the description on the DVD, it's a "joking horror" movie. I've got to go look it up now haha
The creepy guy is from a movie called Bedeviled
Load More Replies...The French equivalent is "Ça", which can translate, depending on context, as "it", "this" or "that".
If you think the other way round, Hollywood's version of The Ring was a knock off of Japanese's The Ring. Also Godzilla and many others.
yea i was surprised when japan realised that cause i went to a thrift store in tokyo and saw something similar to this
Yeah, that's what it's supposed to say. When translated, "th" becomes "z." And it's "zatto."
Load More Replies...My Little Terrified Pony
Just Visited The New Mall That Opened Recently And Saw This Beauty
Gender Equality Meets Retro Gaming
My Favorite Crossover Movie
This "Playstation Controller"
Definitely A Legitimate, Actual Apple Location. Very Real
Bazoongis
the big bong theory: god took a huge bong hit and accidentally created the universe
"Winnie The Pooh" Blanket
Ok I am very concerned about what this poor Pooh Bear is eating...the expression says it all...
The King Of The Magic Rings
Don’t Know If This Is Crappy Or Clever Off Brand
I'm guessing it works well with the demographic that they're going for. That is not as much a fail as a smart move where drunkass 20 somethings can giggle about where they're going.
How Did They Get Away With That!
That is like off brand cereals with weird names. Other off brand restaurants: Burger Queen, Taco Chime, Jill In The Box, McDonnies….
Yea. It's Garfield
When Torpedoes Aren’t Enough
I Present You The Pinnacle Of Shanghai Markets, A Hot Glue NY Yankees Hat
Perfect Games Don't Exi....
Does This Count?
It smells like despair and there's a 45 second delay between pushing the pump and anything happening.
I Have No Idea Who They Were Trying To Copy
Kia AirPods?
Most of these are in countries where English is not widely spoken or even the Latin alphabet is not used (India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, China...). So people don't even realize how obviously the knock-off is a knock-off
I just try to imagine what could happen if english speakers try to write in the languages of these countries… :D
Load More Replies...Knowing me, I'd probably buy 50% of this stuff just because I can.
I want that Pikachu plushie where his eyes are where his cheeks should be!
Load More Replies...I think the main reason behind these knock-offs is that when people see something they recognise, a logo or word, then they are more likely to go to it because they feel safer somewhere they're familiar with.
I think if I went to China, and saw these signs. It will help me out a whole lot. Because I can't read Chinese.
I was too lazy to look it up at first, read your comment, then went back to 'translate' it..."I'm smoking you all the d**k." It didn't disappoint! lmao!
Load More Replies...Most of these are in countries where English is not widely spoken or even the Latin alphabet is not used (India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, China...). So people don't even realize how obviously the knock-off is a knock-off
I just try to imagine what could happen if english speakers try to write in the languages of these countries… :D
Load More Replies...Knowing me, I'd probably buy 50% of this stuff just because I can.
I want that Pikachu plushie where his eyes are where his cheeks should be!
Load More Replies...I think the main reason behind these knock-offs is that when people see something they recognise, a logo or word, then they are more likely to go to it because they feel safer somewhere they're familiar with.
I think if I went to China, and saw these signs. It will help me out a whole lot. Because I can't read Chinese.
I was too lazy to look it up at first, read your comment, then went back to 'translate' it..."I'm smoking you all the d**k." It didn't disappoint! lmao!
Load More Replies...