The success of Apple Inc’s iPad isn’t just drawing more competition to the tablet market. It’s attracting thousands of counterfeit and knockoff products.
On a single day in July, almost 18,000 fakes and clones resembling the iPad and Android devices were available for sale on 23 e-commerce sites, according to MarkMonitor Inc, a San Francisco-based firm that helps companies protect their brands.
The tablets can be illegal — for instance, if they have a bogus Apple logo — and often they don’t work well and have no warranty protection, said Fred Felman, chief marketing officer of MarkMonitor.
The copycat products and suspected counterfeits found in MarkMonitor’s survey were offered by more than 5,000 sellers, many of them located in China.
Knockoff iPads may proliferate during the end of the year holiday season, as shoppers beset by the economic slump go hunting for bargains. That’s creating more competition for Apple, even if many consumers only buy the tablets because they believe they’re getting the real thing.
Apple’s advantage is its software is hard to replicate, said Francis Sideco, an analyst at research firm IHS Inc.
“You can only copy to a certain degree,” he said.
For instance, knockoff tablets may not connect to Apple’s iTunes and App Store.
“It’s not necessarily about hardware, but the software, and it’s very difficult to copy that,” Sideco said.
Apple released the iPad in April last year and it quickly emerged as the company’s No. 2 product category behind the iPhone.
The device has attracted scads of legitimate competitors, with many manufacturers using Google Inc’s Android software. Amazon.com Inc is also jumping into the market this holiday season. It will release its US$199 Kindle Fire tablet later this month, aiming to undercut the iPad, which starts at US$499.
Counterfeiters are increasingly focusing on mobile technology after years of copying pharmaceuticals, handbags, software and other products. Tablets are obvious targets because they’re the most-desired technology gifts this holiday season — beating out laptops, televisions, e-readers and video-game consoles, according to the Consumer Electronics Association.
To avoid getting cheated, shoppers should stick with retail sites they know, Felman said. A dramatically low price is another red flag, he said. The clone tablets in MarkMonitor’s survey were typically 69 percent less than the retail price of the genuine item.
Higher prices, meanwhile, often can signal that shoppers are dealing with gray-market goods — genuine tablets that haven’t been authorized for sale in a given country. Buyers of such devices typically pay a 15 percent premium and then risk having no warranty or a way to resolve technical problems.
More than 5,500 gray-market tablets were offered for sale on the day in July when MarkMonitor conducted its study.
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