Posts Tagged ‘fake’
Taiwan: Buyers Of “Shanzai” Mobile Phones Face NTD300,000 Fine
July 10th, 2009
According to Taiwan’s National Communications Commission, people who sell or buy “Shanzai” mobile phones via the Internet or in electrics marts will face a fine of up to NTD300,000, which is about CNY60,000, in Taiwan.
According to reports in Taiwanese local media, NCC recently stated that under the Administrative Regulations on the Controlled Telecommunications Radio-Frequency Devices, [...]
Baidu.com’s E-commerce Platform Attacks Sellers Of Fake Brands
February 20th, 2009
Youa.baidu.com, the Internet shopping platform launched by search engine Baidu.com, has announced the first batch of 15 stores that have been closed because they were selling counterfeit branded clothing.
This move is a part of Baidu’s special action called Spring Thunder, which will last from February 17 until March 31, 2009. During this period, Youa.baidu.com will [...]
Nokia Mobile Phone Battery On Guangdong’s Quality Blacklist
November 27th, 2008
According to the Guangdong Administration for Industry and Commerce’s report on quality of mobile phone batteries, chargers and wire and cable products sold in Guangdong in the third quarter of 2008, of 249 batches of products produced by 113 companies, 144 batches failed to meet the relevant Chinese standards and the pass rate was only [...]
Illegal Mobile Phone Manufacturers Begin To Develop CDMA, TD Mobile Phones In China
June 12th, 2008
Illegal mobile phone manufacturers in China reportedly have a chance of developing CDMA and TD-SCDMA mobile phones as a result of China’s telecom industry restructuring.
SFDA Exposes Fake Chinese Medicine Websites
June 4th, 2008
China’s State Food and Drug Administration has found out during a recent review that some websites in the country are pretending to be other organizations by releasing false medicine information and selling fake medicines that endanger the public’s health.
Hong Kong Crackdown On Game Console Mods For Pirated Games
June 3rd, 2008
Hong Kong customs officers have conducted a territory-wide operation code-named “Intruder” to crack down on retail activities involving the modification of game consoles to enable customers to play pirated games on the hardware.










