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How fake handbags fund terrorism and organized crime

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    Two years ago, I set off
    from central London on the Tube
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    and ended up somewhere
    in the east of the city
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    walking into a self-storage unit
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    to meet a guy that had
    2,000 luxury polo shirts for sale.
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    And as I made my way down the corridor,
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    a broken, blinking light made it
    just like the cliche scene
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    from a gangster movie.
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    Our man was early,
    and he was waiting for me
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    in front of a unit secured
    with four padlocks down the side.
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    On our opening exchange,
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    it was like a verbal sparring match
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    where he threw the first punches.
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    Who was I?
    Did I have a business card?
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    And where was I going to sell?
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    And then, he just started opening up,
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    and it was my turn.
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    Where were the polo shirts coming from?
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    What paperwork did he have?
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    And when was his next shipment
    going to arrive?
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    I was treading the fine line
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    between asking enough questions
    to get what I needed
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    and not enough for him
    to become suspicious,
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    because what he didn't know
    is that I'm a counterfeit investigator,
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    (Laughter)
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    and after 20 minutes or so
    of checking over the product
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    for the telltale signs
    of counterfeit production --
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    say, badly stitched labels
    or how the packaging
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    had a huge brand logo
    stamped all over the front of it --
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    I was finally on my way out,
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    but not before he insisted
    on walking down to the street with me
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    and back to the station.
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    And the feeling after these meetings
    is always the same:
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    my heart is beating like a drum,
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    because you never know
    if they've actually bought your story,
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    or they're going to start following you
    to see who you really are.
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    Relief only comes
    when you turn the first corner
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    and glance behind,
    and they're not standing there.
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    But what our counterfeit
    polo shirt seller certainly didn't realize
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    is that everything I'd seen and heard
    would result in a dawn raid on his house,
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    him being woken out of bed
    by eight men on his doorstep
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    and all his product seized.
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    But this would reveal
    that he was just a pawn
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    at the end of a counterfeiting network
    spanning three continents,
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    and he was just the first loose thread
    that I'd started to pull on
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    in the hope that it would all unravel.
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    Why go through all that trouble?
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    Well, maybe counterfeiting
    is a victimless crime?
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    These big companies,
    they make enough money,
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    so if anything,
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    counterfeiting is just a free form
    of advertising, right?
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    And consumers believe just that --
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    that the buying and selling of fakes
    is not that big a deal.
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    But I'm here to tell you
    that that is just not true.
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    What the tourist on holiday doesn't see
    about those fake handbags
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    is they may well
    have been stitched together
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    by a child who was trafficked
    away from her family,
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    and what the car repair shop
    owner doesn't realize
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    about those fake brake pads
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    is they may well be lining the pockets
    of an organized crime gang
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    involved in drugs and prostitution.
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    And while those two things
    are horrible to think about,
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    it gets much worse,
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    because counterfeiting
    is even funding terrorism.
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    Let that sink in for a moment.
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    Terrorists are selling fakes
    to fund attacks,
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    attacks in our cities
    that try to make victims of all of us.
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    You wouldn't buy a live scorpion,
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    because there's a chance
    that it would sting you on the way home,
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    but would you still buy a fake handbag
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    if you knew the profits
    would enable someone to buy bullets
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    that would kill you and other
    innocent people six months later?
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    Maybe not.
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    OK, time to come clean.
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    In my youth --
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    yeah, I might look like I'm still
    clinging on to it a bit --
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    I bought fake watches
    while on holiday in the Canary Islands.
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    But why do I tell you this?
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    Well, we've all done it,
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    or we know someone that's done it.
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    And until this very moment,
    maybe you didn't think twice about it,
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    and nor did I,
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    until I answered a 20-word cryptic advert
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    to become an intellectual
    property investigator.
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    It said "Full training given
    and some international travel."
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    Within a week, I was creating
    my first of many aliases,
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    and in the 10 years since,
    I've investigated fake car parts,
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    alloy wheels, fake pet grooming tools,
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    fake bicycle parts,
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    and, of course,
    the counterfeiter's favorite,
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    fake luxury leather goods,
    clothing and shoes.
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    And what I've learned in the 10 years
    of investigating fakes
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    is that once you start
    to scratch the surface,
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    you find that they are rotten to the core,
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    as are the people and organizations
    that are making money from them,
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    because they are profiting
    on a massive, massive scale.
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    You can only make
    around a hundred to 200 percent
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    selling drugs on the street.
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    You can make 2,000 percent
    selling fakes online
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    with little of the same
    risks or penalties.
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    And this quick, easy money
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    then goes on to fund
    the more serious types of crime,
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    and it pays the way
    to making these organizations,
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    these criminal organizations,
    look more legitimate.
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    So let me bring you in on a live case.
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    Earlier this year,
    a series of raids took place
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    in one of my longest-running
    investigations.
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    Five warehouses were raided in Turkey,
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    and over two million finished
    counterfeit clothing products were seized,
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    and it took 16 trucks
    to take that all away.
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    But this gang had been clever.
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    They had gone to the lengths
    of creating their own fashion brands,
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    complete with registered trademarks,
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    and even having photo shoots
    on yachts in Italy.
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    And they would use these completely
    unheard-of and unsuspicious brand names
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    as a way of shipping
    container loads of fakes
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    to shell companies
    that they'd set up across Europe.
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    And documents found during those raids
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    found that they'd been falsifying
    shipping documents
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    so the customs officials
    would literally have no idea
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    who had sent the products
    in the first place.
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    When police got access
    to just one bank account,
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    they found nearly three million euros
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    had been laundered out of Spain
    in less than two years,
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    and just two days after those raids,
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    that gang were trying to bribe a law firm
    to get their stock back.
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    Even now, we have no idea
    where all that money went,
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    to who it went to,
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    but you can bet it's never going
    to benefit the likes of you or me.
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    But these aren't just
    low-level street thugs.
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    They're business professionals,
    and they fly first class.
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    They trick legitimate businesses
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    with convincing fake invoices
    and paperwork,
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    so everything just seems real,
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    and then they set up eBay
    and Amazon accounts
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    just to compete with the people
    they've already sold fakes to.
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    But this isn't just happening online.
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    For a few years, I also used to attend
    automotive trade shows
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    taking place in huge exhibition spaces,
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    but away from the Ferraris
    and the Bentleys and the flashing lights,
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    there'd be companies selling fakes:
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    companies with a brochure on the counter
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    and another one underneath,
    if you ask them the right questions.
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    And they would sell me fake car parts,
    faulty fake car parts
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    that have been estimated to cause
    over 36,000 fatalities,
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    deaths on our roads each year.
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    Counterfeiting is set to become
    a 2.3-trillion-dollar underground economy,
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    and the damage that can be done
    with that kind of money,
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    it's really frightening ...
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    because fakes fund terror.
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    Fake trainers on the streets of Paris,
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    fake cigarettes in West Africa,
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    and pirate music CDs in the USA
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    have all gone on to fund
    trips to training camps,
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    bought weapons and ammunition,
    or the ingredients for explosives.
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    In June 2014, the French security services
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    stopped monitoring the communications
    of Said and Cherif Kouachi,
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    the two brothers who had been
    on a terror watch list for three years.
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    But that summer, they were only
    picking up that Cherif was buying
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    fake trainers from China,
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    so it signaled a shift away from extremism
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    into what was considered
    a low-level petty crime.
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    The threat had gone away.
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    Seven months later,
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    the two brothers walked into the offices
    of Charlie Hebdo magazine
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    and killed 12 people, wounded 11 more,
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    with guns from the proceeds
    of those fakes.
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    So whatever you think, this isn't
    a faraway problem happening in China.
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    It's happening right here.
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    And Paris is not unique.
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    Ten years earlier, in 2004,
    191 people lost their lives
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    when a Madrid commuter train was bombed.
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    The attack had been partly funded
    by the sale of pirate music CDs in the US.
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    Two years prior to that,
    an Al Qaeda training manual
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    recommended explicitly selling fakes
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    as a good way of supporting terror cells.
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    But despite this, despite the evidence
    connecting terrorism and counterfeiting,
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    we do go on buying them,
    increasing the demand
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    to the point where
    there's even a store in Turkey
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    called "I Love Genuine Fakes."
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    And you have tourists posing
    with photographs on TripAdvisor,
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    giving it five-star reviews.
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    But would those same tourists
    have gone into a store
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    called "I Love Genuine Fake Viagra Pills"
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    or "I Genuinely Love Funding Terrorism"?
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    I doubt it.
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    Many of us think
    that we're completely helpless
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    against organized crime and terrorism,
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    that we can do nothing
    about the next attack,
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    but I believe you can.
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    You can by becoming investigators, too.
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    The way we cripple these networks
    is to cut their funding,
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    and that means cutting the demand
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    and changing this idea
    that it's a victimless crime.
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    Let's all identify counterfeiters,
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    and don't give them our money.
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    So here's a few tips
    from one investigator to another
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    to get you started.
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    Number one:
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    here's a typical
    online counterfeiter's website.
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    Note the URL.
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    If you're shopping for sunglasses
    or camera lenses, say,
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    and you come across a website
    like medical-insurance-bankruptcy.com,
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    start to get very suspicious.
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    (Laughter)
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    Counterfeiters register
    expired domain names
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    as a way of keeping up
    the old website's Google page ranking.
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    Number two:
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    is the website screaming at you
    that everything is 100 percent genuine,
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    but still giving you 75 percent
    off the latest collection?
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    Look for words like "master copy,"
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    "overruns," "straight from the factory."
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    They could write this all in Comic Sans,
    it's that much of a joke.
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    (Laughter)
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    Number three:
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    if you get as far as the checkout page,
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    and you don't see "https"
    or a padlock symbol next to the URL,
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    you should really start thinking
    about closing the tab,
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    because these indicate
    active security measures
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    that will keep your personal
    and credit card information safe.
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    OK, last one:
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    go hunting for the "Contact Us" page.
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    If you can only find a generic webform,
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    no company name, telephone number,
    email address, postal address --
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    that's it, case closed.
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    You found a counterfeiter.
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    Sadly, you're going to have
    to go back to Google
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    and start your shopping search
    all over again,
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    but you didn't get ripped off,
    so that's only a good thing.
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    As the world's most famous
    fictional detective would say,
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    "Watson, the game is afoot."
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    Only this time, my investigator friends,
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    the game is painfully real.
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    So the next time you're shopping online,
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    or perhaps wherever it is,
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    look closer, question a little bit
    deeper, and ask yourself --
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    before you hand over
    the cash or click "Buy,"
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    "Am I sure this is real?"
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    Tell your friend that used to buy
    counterfeit watches
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    that he may just have brought
    the next attack one day closer.
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    And, if you see
    an Instagram advert for fakes,
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    don't keep scrolling past,
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    report it to the platform as a scam.
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    Let's shine a light
    on the dark forces of counterfeiting
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    that are hiding in plain sight.
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    So please, spread the word
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    and don't stop investigating.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How fake handbags fund terrorism and organized crime
Speaker:
Alastair Gray
Description:

What's the harm in buying a knock-off purse or a fake designer watch? According to counterfeit investigator Alastair Gray, fakes like these fund terrorism and organized crime. Learn more about the trillion-dollar underground economy of counterfeiting -- from the criminal organizations that run it to the child labor they use to produce its goods -- as well as measures you can take to help stop it. "Let's shine a light on the dark forces of counterfeiting that are hiding in plain sight," Gray says.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:02

English subtitles

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