A French court has
ordered eBay to pay a 40m euro fine (£36.1m; $63m) to luxury goods group
LVMH for allowing fake copies of its goods to be auctioned on the site. The case
was brought against eBay by six brands belonging to LVMH - Lois Vuitton
Malletier, Christian Dior Couture, Dior perfume, Guerlain perfume, Kenzo perfume
and Givenchy perfume. The company alleged that even legitimate auctions of their
products were illegal due to only specialist dealers being permitted to sell
them. eBay will no longer be allowed to sell the four perfumes in the
future. A spokesman for LVMH said that it "protected brands by considering them
an important part of French heritage".
eBay have dedicated themselves to fighting back against this ruling, saying
"Today's ruling is about an attempt by LVMH to protect uncompetitive commercial
practices at the expense of consumer choice and the livelihood of law-abiding
sellers that eBay empowers everyday". The case goes some way to protecting
eBayers from the sale of counterfeits, but is it really justified that they
should be barred from listing legitimate goods in an open market?