I love new gadgets, but there's never a "right time" to buy. Now it seems, you may not even be buying the real thing?!
Nokia's latest mobile phones have appeared on eBay this week. The N96 (US$500+) and Sapphire Arte (US$1,000) mobile phone handsets are being listed for "way below the market price." Uh, an obvious hint that they're fake?!
Surprising to me is the role Dubai plays in the trade of bogus goods. It seems that the UAE is a known hub for traffiking goods from China to the West. Known as the "dragon market" it's described as "the biggest trading port for Chinese traders outside China."
Nokia UK's managing director, Simon Ainslie, told Mobile magazine, "We take [counterfeit products] very seriously. Copied phones still exist and our intellectual property team are always investigating them."
Here is a blatant advert for a website that supplies the bogus gadgets.
Helpful links
How to detect fake Nokias
Showing posts with label Fake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fake. Show all posts
Friday, 10 October 2008
Sunday, 12 August 2007
Bowl of cardboard dumplings please...NOT

Oh man, as if China didn't have enough world attention on its quality control! Zi Beijia, an aspiring investigative journalist for Beijing Television faked a story that shocked viewers of his report, but also landed him in jail!
Reuters reports that Zi had been arrested after it emerged that he had fabricated a report that local dumplings hawkers were adding softened, pork-flavoured cardboard to their food. On Sunday, a Chinese court sentenced the TV reporter to one year in jail for faking the report that was picked up across the world.
The Chinese official Xinhua news agency reported: "the journalist, Zi Beijia, was convicted after an open court hearing of "infringing the reputation of commodities". He was also fined 1,000 yuan ($132)."
Damage unlimited
But the damage has been done. No one hears that the story is fake, just that there was such a story. The public will remember that China has such practices and might, at best, remember that China fakes news reports.
In this new emerging market economy, trust between China and other countries needs to be earnt. Individuals are busy scrambling to grab a piece of the cake at any cost, but all the outside world sees is China Inc. suffering huge growing pains.
Labels:
Beijing Television,
China Inc.,
Fake,
Food,
Reuters,
Xinhua
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