http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7481241.stm

A French court has ordered eBay to pay 40m euros (£31.6m; $63m) to luxury goods 
group LVMH for allowing online auctions of fake copies of its goods. 

LVMH said eBay's French site had not done enough to stop the sale of 
counterfeit bags and perfumes. 

The brands affected include Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior and Givenchy. 

An eBay statement said LVMH was trying to "protect uncompetitive commercial 
practices at the expense of consumer choice" and added that it would appeal. 

'Illicit' 

The case against eBay in a commercial court in Paris was brought jointly by six 
brands belonging to the LVMH group. 

Louis Vuitton Malletier, the group's handbag and luggage section, and clothing 
brand Christian Dior Couture accused eBay of "negligence" in allowing illegal 
copies of their goods to be sold in online auctions. 

Four perfume brands - Dior, Guerlain, Kenzo and Givenchy - sued for what they 
called "illicit sales" of their products. 

They alleged that even auctions involving their legitimate perfumes were 
illegal, because only specialist dealers were permitted to sell them. 

The court barred eBay from selling the four perfumes in future. 

LVMH spokesman Pierre Gode welcomed the decision, telling French news agency 
AFP that it "protected brands by considering them an important part of French 
heritage". 

'Uncompetitive' 

But Vanessa Canzini, an eBay spokeswoman, said: "If counterfeits appear on our 
sites, we take them down swiftly, but today's ruling is not about our fight 
against counterfeit. 

"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. 

"We will fight this ruling on their behalf; we will be seeking leave to 
appeal." 

According to the judgement, eBay must pay 19.28m euros in damages to Luis 
Vuitton Malletier, 17.3m to Christian Dior Couture and 3.25m to the perfume 
brands. 

The BBC's Hugh Schofield in Paris says the ruling is seen as a landmark, 
because it could oblige eBay to rethink its business model. 

Until now, this has been built around the simple notion of bringing together 
buyers and sellers, with minimal supervision from the company. 

The penalty is the second in a month imposed on eBay by French courts. 

On 4 June, a court in the eastern French city of Troyes found the auction site 
directly responsible for the sale of fake Hermes bags. 

It imposed a penalty of 20,000 euros jointly on eBay and the woman who offered 
the bags for sale. 

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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