Ramblings of an old Doc
Published on June 18, 2016 By DrJBHL In Personal Computing

 

Apple has been ordered to stop selling the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus in the capitol – get this – because the phone’s design is too similar to the Shenzhen 100C smartphone. Horses and carts, that.

There are six counterfeit iPhones produced in China. Apple is playing in a casino where the only decks are the stacked decks. Not enough they’re stealing brazenly, they’ve even ripped off the iOS, and Apple stores.

But things aren’t coincidental in China, which is Apple’s largest market outside the U.S.

In April, the company was ordered to close its iBooks and iTunes Movies stores. Why? Because the Chinese Government is making it harder for foreign owners to publish online content – without a local partner…and of course, government approval. That smacks of “we want a piece of the pie”. To Apple customers, it’ll mean higher prices somewhere along the line.

So, this is the probable reason for why Apple’s CEO Tim Cook visited China in May…that and Apple’s 11% fall in sales – first ever, announced in April.

Oh, and Apple recently invested $1 billion in a Chinese ride-hailing company (DiDi Chuxing), “For strategic reasons”, Cook said. Right. The strategy? To continue to do business in China. I wonder which  Chinese General/politician owns that company?

Why does all this matter, really? Because Apple customers will pay the price, as will America.

Right…the cost of doing business. I wonder when the Federal government will start investigating Apple for illegal business practices, because it’s pretty obvious why there’s a sudden $1 billion dollar investment in an existing app. Don’t misunderstand. I’m on Apple’s side. It’s not getting much protection from our government…and I doubt any other company is, either.

What’s the incentive to innovate if your products and ideas are being ripped off at will?

Sources:

https://techcrunch.com/2016/06/17/apple-ordered-to-stop-selling-two-iphone-models-in-china/

http://mashable.com/2016/06/17/apple-china-knockoffs/#67_B2TfjkPqL


Comments
on Jun 18, 2016

As you very correctly said, Horses and carts. China is well versed in this kind of thing. With several industries they invite foreign companies into the country with some form of joint venture. Learn and copy everything they can from them and then block/hinder them so the huge market they thought they were cracking gets suddenly a lot more constricted.

You say Apple made that major investment, time will tell whether it pays off or not. 

on Jun 18, 2016

Americans can enjoy "their" Ugg Boots .....made in China.... and stolen from Australians by Americans.

 

At least we still get the real ones....while the Americans can't even get the originals and HAVE TO be happy with the Chinese crap copies.

 

What goes around comes around.

 

...and Apple still owes Oz $300 million AUD in unpaid taxes.

 

Fuck them, I say.

on Jun 18, 2016

The knock offs are made in China...Australia the victim of the same economics of cheap labor.

The market will buy the less expensive product, and quality will run second. You blame America? Well, I'd think blaming China would be more accurate. Too bad the Chinese do what they do...if the world got together and penalized them, but no...

Example? The Japanese imported cars and Reagan: He decided to put a tax on them that made them more expensive than American cars. So, what did the geniuses do? They raised the price of American cars.

As for taxes? I'm sure there are at least two sides to that story. Because of tax law Apple (and MS and Google and all big companies) pull a fast on called "transfer pricing":

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-03-06/tax-expert-explains-how-apple-pays-193m-tax-on-27b-revenue/5303426

 

Which is "smart" from a business point of view while being still contemptible from Australia's point of view...maybe countries should get together and get on the backs of those who offer such tax deals?

Apple hardly did Australia damage with this though, did it? 

http://www.businessinsider.com.au/apples-australian-bonds-just-hit-3-billion-in-orders-2015-8

 

on Jun 18, 2016

DrJBHL

The knock offs are made in China...Australia the victim of the same economics of cheap labor.

The market will buy the less expensive product, and quality will run second. You blame America?

The Aussie/Kiwi 'Ugg boot' was around for about 60 years and had become common vernacular....

The US importer wanted to make more profit so while setting up a Chinese source discovered there was no registered Trademark so took it upon themselves to 'own it' and then have the temerity to demand any original manufacturers cease and desist in spite of probably 3 generations of production.

It became truly insulting when they DEMANDED the reference to 'Ugg' in the dictionary be changed to show them as the owner.

The ACCC threw out their claim as bullshit....but they are now fronting our Supreme Court for damages et al.

Yes....they're probably miffed that the US customers are likely asking what happened to the REAL ones.

BTW....the arseholes actually include 'Australian' in their Trademark which is patently illegal as they are NOT.  Hopefully Oz will force them to at least remove that reference.

on Jun 18, 2016

DrJBHL

Apple hardly did Australia damage with this though, did it? 

Companies and individuals paying their share in tax to contribute to the country's coffers are subsidising Apple who benefits from the taxed economy without paying their share...

It's a free ride for them and thus unfair on everyone else.

on Jun 18, 2016



Quoting DrJBHL,

The knock offs are made in China...Australia the victim of the same economics of cheap labor.

The market will buy the less expensive product, and quality will run second. You blame America?



The Aussie/Kiwi 'Ugg boot' was around for about 60 years and had become common vernacular....

The US importer wanted to make more profit so while setting up a Chinese source discovered there was no registered Trademark so took it upon themselves to 'own it' and then have the temerity to demand any original manufacturers cease and desist in spite of probably 3 generations of production.

It became truly insulting when they DEMANDED the reference to 'Ugg' in the dictionary be changed to show them as the owner.

The ACCC threw out their claim as bullshit....but they are now fronting our Supreme Court for damages et al.

Yes....they're probably miffed that the US customers are likely asking what happened to the REAL ones.

BTW....the arseholes actually include 'Australian' in their Trademark which is patently illegal as they are NOT.  Hopefully Oz will force them to at least remove that reference.

While they should have protected their product, what that "enterprising" s.o.b. was execrable. No excuse for such business practices imo.

But, karma being what it is, I'll join you in hoping the bastard gets it in the neck for what he did...and of course, the Chinese manufacturers who produce the knock offs are no less guilty of theft, but will be the ones who get away with it because of their piracy/theft based business practices.

Disgusting all around.

But that being true, you see that the same thing that happened with the Uggs happened to Apple.

 

on Jun 29, 2016

interesting phrases..

markets.

voting with their wallets.

rarely do people do what they say. buy quality / genuine / local products, instead of just puffing hot air about dumping / fake.

kind of like people going around various supermarkets looking for cheaper stuff and ignoring the extra petrol / time costs.

 

but yeah. some trademark stuff makes no sense. think there was a recent case where some chinese company that makes accessories with brand iphone something or other retains the right to use the mark (over there), because apple didn't enter the market over there (and register the mark) before that company started selling the stuff. much like stupid stuff such as sky objecting to no man's sky or skydrive.