Feds Shut Down 150 More Counterfeit Selling Web Sites
“More
and more Americans are doing their holiday shopping online, and they
may not realize that purchasing counterfeit goods results in American
jobs lost, American business profits stolen and American consumers
receiving substandard products”
By Dell Hill
For
most of us, the Internet is a wonderful thing. We are pretty much
addicted to it. We’ve also reached the point where shopping online is
preferable to fighting the crowds at the mall. Paying online is easy
and safe.
Woooops! Scratch that last sentence.
Buying
and paying online can (and often does) result in the theft of your
money and no product or service delivered, and if they are, they’re
counterfeit.
Enter the Cyber Patrol!
“The Department of Justice
used blockbuster shopping event Cyber Monday to announce the
blockbuster seizure of 150 websites that had been selling counterfeit
goods, the agency announced Monday.
The
seizure was a joint operation that united the DoJ with several groups,
including the Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations group and the FBI's Washington field office.
“For
most, the holidays represent a season of good will and giving, but for
these criminals, it’s the season to lure in unsuspecting holiday
shoppers,” ICE director John Morton said in a statement about the
seizure.
The
150 seized domains are in the custody of the federal government, the
DoJ said. Visitors to the sites will now find a seizure banner that
notifies them that the domain name has been seized by federal
authorities and educates them that willful copyright infringement is a
federal crime.
“More
and more Americans are doing their holiday shopping online, and they
may not realize that purchasing counterfeit goods results in American
jobs lost, American business profits stolen and American consumers
receiving substandard products,” Morton added.
This operation is the eighth phase of Operation In Our Sites,
a sustained law enforcement initiative to protect consumers by
targeting counterfeit and piracy on the Internet, the DoJ said. This is
the second year that a phase of Operation In Our Sites has coincided
with Cyber Monday. In November 2010, 82 websites were seized during the
Cyber Monday-related operation.
Since
the operation’s June 2010 launch, the ICE-led National Intellectual
Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center) -- which the DoJ
described as a key weapon in the fight against counterfeiting and piracy
-- has seized a total of 350 domain names, and the seizure banner has
received more than 77 million individual views.
Of
the 350 domain names seized, 116 have now been forfeited to the U.S.
government. The DoJ did not disclose the names of the sites that had
been seized.”
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