Not bold, they're fairly standard claims which have been backed by many, many investigations and reports over the years by numerous people and organisations worldwide.
As an example from:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publi...goods-research/ipo-counterfeit-goods-research
- according to the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, counterfeiting is now the second largest source of criminal income worldwide.
- there are proven links between the sale of counterfeit goods and the funding of terrorist operations and of prominent groups such as Isis, the IRA, Al Qaïda etc. For example, police believe the perpetrators of the Charlie Hebdo attacks sold counterfeit Nike trainers in order to fund the weapons they used.
- according to police, this year has seen an increase in incidents of counterfeiting operations in the UK that are linked to organised criminal groups, human trafficking, child sexual exploitation and prostitution.
Now, if you think that cycling components are somehow different to that, and that those who copy cycling parts compared to any other fakery worldwide are somehow more altruistic and less criminally minded then you are, sadly, mistaken.
My comment was in no way racist so don't try to undermine my statement by saying as such. In Chinese manufacturing there's very little value given to the ownership of intellectual property or design rights (and I have seen this first hand with my own work in several situations), and you only have to look at a multitude of products to see what is essentially the same product copied and sold with a different badge on it. It's not that they are trying to counterfeit as a criminal act, more that they just don't see the issue with manufacturing something using reverse engineering or copying of the original part. Many factories will freely rip components off and pass them to unwitting consumers as genuine, or simply pass off a lookalike to consumers who do know and just want the label - the former can obviously be incredibly dangerous if a component is bought with the expectation that it's been made from the same high quality materials as the original, with the same QC and post-treatment and is then used based on that expectation. Some Chinese manufacturing is superb, and really cutting edge, but that's not generally how the counterfeit stuff is produced - there's also a difference in selling seconds out the back door (albeit even these can often be made with substandard materials), and actively copying a design with no connection to the original designer. Now, my point was that the factories producing this stuff in China are less likely to be the actual actors involved in organised crime, but they are complicit in it by producing the goods that the criminal agents then use. If you buy directly through aliexpress so it comes straight from the factory then it's
lesslikely to be funding things like terrorism, but not impossible.
Also, I think you will do well to understand how intellectual property works. It's one thing reproducing a part that is long since NLA and from a company which no longer exists, vs actively ripping off something that is still on active sale. After all, if it really didn't matter that the part wasn't copying something directly, why would you want to copy the logo in such a way that it was either identical, or mimicked the original? Of course you are doing that to piggyback off the reputation/image/brand that has been cultivated by another company or person.
From:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publi...esses/ip-crime-and-enforcement-for-businesses
- IP rights are infringed when a product, creation or invention protected by IP laws are exploited, copied or otherwise used without the permission or consent of the person who owns those rights or their representative.
- It can range from using technology protected by a patent to selling counterfeit medicines/software, copying a film and making it available online to selling counterfeit goods including clothing, makeup, and DVDs. All these acts will constitute a civil infringement. However, in the case of trade marks, designs and copyright the act may also constitute a criminal offence if it’s conducted in the course of a business.