Trademark breakout session #2: Counterfeiting and Its Effect
on the Market for the Genuine Article
Facilitator: Scott Hemphill (Columbia; Visiting Professor,
NYU)
Why we care: innovation policy; enforcement policy. Debate over magnitude: 10s of billions, 100s
of billions in the US? Is that all
damage? Lost profits: what monetary effects
does it actually have on TM owners?
Counterfeiting scenarios: (1) seller fools the buyer: drugs,
aircraft parts. Mostly we aren’t talking
about that, but rather (2) buyer fooling everyone else: handbags, sunglasses,
footwear. Or (3) nobody is fooled. Is
that even counterfeiting? Dilution?
Standard story: substitution. Though substitution is highly
contested. Overuse—becomes uncool.
Positive stories: Sampling: I try it, I like it, and ultimately I buy the
original (as with sampling in music downloading). Advertising: Might drive word of mouth. Still might be a case for enforcement—the legitimate
seller still needs some way of recovering; illegality can be a form of price
discrimination by segmenting the market.
Sprigman: law on books v. law on streets. In criminal
counterfeiting, DOJ maintains and most courts accept that once they prove the D’s
mark is identical to/substantially indistinguishable from the registered mark,
confusion is conclusively presumed. Civil
counterfeiting plaintiffs are now taking the same position. Real example: if I take a wallet and fake up
an expensive LV emblem, and stitch “fake” all over it, so no consumer would be
confused, the gov’t says that’s criminal counterfeiting. The Q of harm from counterfeiting has to be
assessed w/in that framework.
McKenna: Other ways in which context matters: many kinds of
products can be counterfeited, and some are much more harmful than others. Yi Qian has
empirical evidence: similarity of price matters a lot. Where price is quite
different, advertising effect tends to swamp substitution effect, but reverses
as prices converge.
Joel Waldfogel: Deadweight loss can turn into consumer
surplus if I can get a cheap copy of a handbag; no loss unless other people
react badly to the fact that I own a copy.
Can look across products: but are there systematic data for fake Gucci
purses? Can look across individuals to
see what their stock of fake/real stuff is. Do people who buy fake stuff start
buying less real stuff over time?
(Drawing on music downloading studies.)
Stefan Bechtold: can present consumers with well-known
brands and knockoffs whose similarity is exogenously varied. Ask about
perception of knockoff and brand—determine whether there is some
advertising/spillover effects.
Mike Meurer: Child labor/slave labor producing counterfeit
goods?
Sprigman: terrorism, narcotics, organized crime: it’s a
problem w/manufactured goods generally!
Rahul Telang: comparative pressure on original seller to
innovate to avoid copying? Pressure to lower prices that could be good?
Hemphill: Qian gets into that in her work on footwear in
China. Firms most affected by counterfeits respond by going up vertically in
quality—fancier, invest in vertical integration. Natural experiment in that 1995 marked an
exogenous fall in TM enforcement as inspectors shifted to tainted food. Also
some companies were more in with the Chinese gov’t than others, and could get
more help—measured distance from gov’t. At the high end advertising effect
dominated over substitution, opposite at the low end. One of the Megaupload
papers finds an effect like this: substitution dominates for blockbusters but
advertising dominates for smaller movies.
Sprigman: The potential is for lower cost advertising when
other people sell copies than when you advertise for yourself. Other people
give you credibility by choosing to consume the counterfeit. But the proper
function of law here is a relevant consideration.
Telang: Bill Gates says, if you copy any product, copy
mine. I’ll eventually get you to shift
over/buy complement.
Hemphill: generating some illegality may enable your price
discrimination.
Orly Lobel: Different things you can do in this realm:
Dishonesty of honest people. Who is
willing to do what? Also can measure
willingness to pay: and can measure deliberate ignorance/degree of certainty
about whether something is a counterfeit.
Also: secondary markets. If there’s less demand/supply for counterfeits
that can affect the size of the secondary market.
Hemphill: WIPO 2010 has a literature review on empirical
studies—a few in the area of why people buy.
Glynn Lunney: categories of counterfeits. If the law allowed
counterfeiting when no direct purchaser is confused the line might become more
blurred. Could become difficult for
buyers to tell the difference. If
substitution and overuse are balanced by sampling/advertising, we should be
able to allow the TM owner to enforce and TM owner would enforce efficiently;
the question is consumer welfare—deadweight loss, desire for prestige brand.
RT: Dan
Ariely on honesty—if you feel like a fake, you behave more dishonestly:
another separate effect and it’s not clear how much law affects this but to the
extent law affects magnitude it may matter. Also, Lunney’s theory is unlikely to
materialize because TM owners will overenforce: they will often see things in a
property frame whether or not allowing some counterfeiting would be beneficial,
if they have the right to enforce and are not forced to give up on the idea of
control by practical realities. (See
Jessica Silbey’s work.)
Strandburg: might be that counterfeiting doesn’t matter as
long as it’s illegal. Companies might want it to be illegal while being
satisfied with a certain level.
Hemphill: much variation in reactions to buying counterfeits. 122 attendees at counterfeit purse parties, with
no previous exposure to brand. 46% subsequently bought an original from the same
line. Some felt very bad about having bought/being complimented.
McKenna: note how much this conversation doesn’t have to do
w/TM law. The trouble is situations we
all know there’s no confusion. It either
is or isn’t another problem. Ought to be a question of whether we want
copyright or design protection. If the mechanism of harm isn’t confusion, it
doesn’t belong in TM. Sui generis design
choices are very different. If we all
recognize that there are problematic forms of counterfeiting, that’s where it’s
most likely the case there’s genuine confusion.
So long as TM does its traditional role, no problem. Next we ask whether
TM should address another type of product.
Sprigman: maybe we know it’s not confusion, but INTA doesn’t
know. There aren’t studies that fully
contextualize shopping experiences. Need to know more about shopping intention.
Lack empirical infrastructure to say where confusion really is. His intuition agrees that in large swathes
people know what they’re getting and it’s just reducing deadweight loss, but
there’s work to be done.
Strandburg: relates to panel session: confusion is all
related to context, which includes price, but no TM study will ever ask whether
people think the $20 thing comes from Louis Vuitton: decontextualization of
confusion.
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