CEO Arrested for Selling $1 Billion in Fake Cisco Hardware on Amazon, eBay (pcmag.com) 23
A Miami-based CEO has been arrested for allegedly importing $1 billion worth of counterfeit Cisco equipment from China and then selling it on Amazon and eBay. From a report: The Justice Department announced today that it had indicted 38-year-old Onur "Ron" Aksoy for selling the counterfeit Cisco gear via numerous online storefronts. Allegedly, Aksoy imported tens of thousands of fraudulent Cisco devices from China and Hong Kong. He then created at least 19 companies in New Jersey and Florida, dubbed the "Pro Network," to help him resell the hardware as genuine through the e-commerce sites.
"The operation allegedly generated over $100 million in revenue, and Aksoy received millions of dollars for his personal gain," the Justice Department said. The Cisco equipment Aksoy allegedly sold was usually older, lower-end models that were previously bought or discarded. Counterfeiters in China then modified the equipment, making the devices appear as if they were newer or more expensive Cisco product models. "As alleged, the Chinese counterfeiters often added pirated Cisco software and unauthorized, low-quality, or unreliable components -- including components to circumvent technological measures added by Cisco to the software to check for software license compliance and to authenticate the hardware," the Justice Department said. In addition, the counterfeit products were packaged with authentic-looking labels, boxes, and documentation.
"The operation allegedly generated over $100 million in revenue, and Aksoy received millions of dollars for his personal gain," the Justice Department said. The Cisco equipment Aksoy allegedly sold was usually older, lower-end models that were previously bought or discarded. Counterfeiters in China then modified the equipment, making the devices appear as if they were newer or more expensive Cisco product models. "As alleged, the Chinese counterfeiters often added pirated Cisco software and unauthorized, low-quality, or unreliable components -- including components to circumvent technological measures added by Cisco to the software to check for software license compliance and to authenticate the hardware," the Justice Department said. In addition, the counterfeit products were packaged with authentic-looking labels, boxes, and documentation.
Hm (Score:4, Interesting)
What makes him different than any other CEO? Lack of connections?
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So small fry, and those guys can rot.
Plus the people in charge can go "Look look. We are doing something against bad businesses."
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Re:"Fake"? (Score:4, Interesting)
The equivalent here would be taking a 2960S switch, modifying the case (or putting it in a clone case) for a 2960X. Then you change the IOS so that it says it's a 2960X, and sell it as a 2960X. Even better if you can scam someone by putting it in a 9200 case. Same thing with an AP... get a 3500 series AP and put it in a clone 9120AX case.
Uh, what? (Score:4, Interesting)
Sounds like he's still around $900 million out of pocket. The numbers don't make sense.
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Presumably that $1 billion is the list price of the equipment that it was claiming to be. What they actually paid for was a load of old junk (probably free or nearly so), the cost of faking it to look like better kit, and overheads. They then sold it for an apparently knock-down price, bringing in "over $100m".
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So, a completely made-up number with no basis in reality. Like when cops make a drug bust, and value the ton of dope as if it were being sold as $10 joints.
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I'm ashamed. (Score:2)
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Upcycle and reuse (Score:3)
I thought upcycling and reusing things were supposed to be good.
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Only if you're honest about what it is.
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Whoosh.
Put the bastard in front of a firing squad! (Score:2)
All joking aside, I'm sick and tired of having to be constantly vigilant for counterfeit goods. This didn't used to be a problem in the US, but with the rise of eBay and Amazon Marketplace it has become a real issue. They've provided platforms for every would-be scam artist in the world to defraud large audiences. I have no patience for this, especially when the counterfeit goods present a danger. We should stiffen the penalties and increase the enforcement efforts. I want to go back to only having to be wo
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I want to go back to only having to be worried about always getting fucked at the drive-through.
Doesn't that annoy the people waiting in line behind you?
China special? (Score:2)
After that (Score:2)
They might want to go after whoever is importing fake SD cards into the US they are sold on both eBay and Amazon. They will take a cheap $2 SD card from China reprint a Samsung SanDisk or Kingston label on to it and put it in packaging that is almost indistinguishable from the real thing.
Reliability issue (Score:2)
As alleged, the Chinese counterfeiters often added pirated Cisco software and unauthorized, low-quality, or unreliable components
So it would have been a smaller issue if they had added high-quality, reliable components?
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