
Vietnam steps up fight on imported counterfeits amid US tariff talks
The US raised concerns about the ongoing sales of fake luxury goods in malls and online, highlighting Vietnam's role in production. (EPA Images pic)
HANOI : Vietnam is stepping up its fight against counterfeits and digital piracy after the US accused the country of being a major hub for these illegal activities and threatened crippling tariffs, documents reviewed by Reuters show.
Among products that are subject to increased inspections at borders to ascertain their authenticity are luxury goods from Prada and Gucci owner Kering, electronic devices made by Google and Samsung, and toys from Mattel and Lego, according to a document dated April 1 from the customs department of the finance ministry.
Consumer goods such as shampoos and razors sold by Procter & Gamble and Johnson and Johnson products are also included in the list, the document showed.
The crackdown focuses on imported counterfeits, not those that could be made in Vietnam, which are also of concern to the administration of US President Donald Trump.
A clampdown on the use of counterfeit software is also underway, according to a warning from inspectors at the ministry of culture sent on April 14 to a local company, whose name was redacted from the document seen by Reuters.
The letter, it says, followed a complaint from the Business Software Alliance (BSA), the industry's global trade association, whose members include Microsoft, Oracle and Adobe.
A person familiar with the matter said similar letters have been sent to dozens of companies since the start of April.
Vietnam's finance and culture ministries and the customs department did not reply to requests for comment, nor did any of the mentioned companies.
A spokesperson for BSA said it has for years urged Vietnam to monitor and take action against the unauthorised use of software.
Vietnam's recent moves are part of an array of measures taken or pledged by the Southeast Asian export-reliant industrial hub to persuade the Trump administration to reconsider punitive tariffs. Vietnam faces duties of 46% on exports to the US, its largest market, if confirmed in July after a global pause.
Vietnam and the US began informal talks to avoid tariffs well before Trump announced global 'reciprocal' duties on April 2.
Enhanced protection of intellectual property, including the fight against counterfeits and digital piracy, is among the issues being discussed with the US in ongoing tariff talks.
Also under discussion are the reduction of Vietnam's big trade surplus, the fight against trade fraud such as illegal transshipment, and lowering tariff and non-tariff barriers for US businesses, according to a person briefed on the matter.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh last month instructed officials to strengthen the fight against trade fraud, 'especially regarding the origin of goods, counterfeit goods.'
The measures are meant to please Washington but some may irk China, which is the main source of Vietnam's imports.
'Notorious markets'
Despite enhanced controls on imported counterfeits, fake luxury goods targeted by the authorities were on display last week at Saigon Square Shopping Mall in Vietnam's business hub Ho Chi Minh City.
The mall is on the list of 'notorious markets for counterfeiting' published in January by the US trade representative.
'They are not authentic and are made in China,' said an attendant in one of the stalls in the market, referring to Prada wallets and bags she's selling.
She noted counterfeit Prada belts, also available at her stall, were made in Vietnam. The person declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the subject.
Calls to Saigon Square went unanswered. Its website says the mall offers 'imitations of famous brands at low prices'.
The USTR removed a Vietnamese marketplace at the border with China from its latest watchlist published in January after a crackdown by local authorities. It praised Vietnam's efforts to combat illegal practices, but also expressed concerns over continuing online sales of counterfeit products and Vietnam's role in producing fakes.
The Vietnamese platform of Singapore-based e-commerce giant Shopee remained a major hub for the sale of counterfeits, the USTR said.
'As more brands have shifted production from China to Vietnam, stakeholders report that Vietnam has become a key manufacturer of counterfeit products,' the USTR said in a separate report published in April.
The USTR and Shopee did not reply to requests for comment.
To improve copyright protection Vietnam is planning to set up specialised courts 'to fulfil Vietnam's commitment… to strictly enforce intellectual property rights' and attract foreign investment, according to a draft law reviewed by Reuters scheduled to be approved by parliament in June.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
5 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Govt approval rating up by 10%, says research house
Merdeka Center's latest report, issued to mark the midpoint of the Anwar Ibrahim-led administration's five-year term, said Malaysians are beginning to feel the country is on a more stable footing following a period of political instability. (File pic) PETALING JAYA : The approval rating for the government has risen to 50%, while a majority of Malaysian voters has given Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim a positive approval rating of 55%, according to research house Merdeka Center. The latest approval rating for the government marks a 10% improvement from the 40% scored in June last year. In December of last year, Anwar's approval rating stood at 54%, while in June 2024 it was 43%. Merdeka Center's latest report, released to mark the midpoint of the Madani administration's five-year term, said Malaysians are beginning to feel the country is on a more stable footing following a period of political instability. 'Malaysians are beginning to feel the country is finally on firmer ground, with political turbulence easing and Anwar now leading a government with a two-thirds parliamentary majority. 'Institutional reforms like the revived Parliamentary Services Act 2025 also signal a return to principled governance,' the report, based on a survey carried out in May, said. It also said economic factors played a key role. Inflation eased to a three-year low of 1.4% in March, while gross domestic product grew by 4.4% in the first quarter. The report said the government's move to raise the minimum wage to RM1,700, provide festive cash aid to civil servants, and maintain fuel subsidies appear to have eased public anxiety over the rising cost of living. However, the survey noted that Malaysians remain most concerned about everyday economic issues. 'Bread-and-butter issues – not foreign policy or speeches – still move the Malaysian public the most,' Merdeka Center said. While Anwar's international engagements, including hosting Chinese president Xi Jinping and chairing Asean, have raised Malaysia's diplomatic profile, they have had less impact on voter sentiment than domestic issues. Dissatisfaction towards the federal government stands at 48% compared to 58% a year ago, although concerns linger over possible subsidy cuts in the near future. On the country's direction, 43% of those surveyed said Malaysia is heading the right way, an improvement from 29% in June 2024. Meanwhile, 50% still believe it is going in the wrong direction, down from 61% a year earlier. The poll was conducted from May 12 to 23 with 1,208 registered voters. The respondents were selected through random stratified sampling across age, ethnicity, gender and state constituencies.


Free Malaysia Today
5 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Chow renews plea for Putrajaya to share revenue with Penang
Chief minister Chow Kon Yeow said while federal funding for infrastructure is welcome, Penang also needs resources for social and welfare programmes. (Johnshen Lee pic) GEORGE TOWN : Penang chief minister Chow Kon Yeow says the federal government should 'seriously consider' the state's request for a share of revenue, given its key role in the country's economy. He said his earlier proposal to have 20% of revenue collected from Penang returned to the state was not taken up by Putrajaya. 'I think it is an appropriate time for the federal government to consider (this request) seriously and not just push it aside. If not 20%, we can start with 10%,' he told reporters at Komtar today. Chow said while federal funding for infrastructure was welcome, the state needed resources for social and welfare programmes. He had told the state assembly on May 19 that Penang's finances were under pressure, citing a projected deficit of over RM100 million. He said despite perceptions of Penang as a wealthy state, most tax revenue from investors flowed to federal coffers, not the state. Chow's push for sales and service tax revenue sharing comes as pressure mounts on Putrajaya to address imbalances in revenue sharing between the federal and state governments. He said Penang was the second highest contributor to the nation's approved manufacturing investments in the first quarter of 2025, securing RM6.7 billion or 22% of the country's total. He said 90% of the investments in the first quarter of 2025 came from foreign sources, led by the US (RM2.4 billion), Hong Kong (RM1.3 billion) and Taiwan (RM1.1 billion), mostly in the electrical and electronics and machinery sectors. He said Penang continued to attract investor interest despite global uncertainty, including the recent US tariff announcements. However, the Q1 figures likely reflected decisions made before the tariffs, and that the true impact would only be seen in later quarters. 'The numbers we have in Q1 are about 40% of what we got last year. We expect to get equal or better than last year's numbers,' he said, noting that Penang recorded RM17.3 billion in total investments in 2024. InvestPenang to meet Intel Asked about chipmaker Intel's reported pause in plans to expand in the state, Chow said InvestPenang would meet the company 'this or next week' for updates. 'Their facility is close to completion. I was invited to visit the facility a few months back to see the progress. And now it has progressed even further, nearing completion,' he said. In 2021, Intel announced a US$9 billion (RM38.5 billion) investment to build an advanced chip packaging and testing facility in Penang, its first such plant outside the US. However, the company placed the project on 'indefinite hold' in late 2024 following poor financial results and capital expenditure cuts. Investment, trade and industry minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz later said he had met with Intel to discuss its reinvestment plans. He said the firm's long-standing presence since 1972 reflected its continued confidence in the country as a key base outside the US.


Free Malaysia Today
6 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
DeepSeek aids China's military and evaded export controls, says US official
US lawmakers said DeepSeek transmits American users' data to China through 'backend infrastructure' connected to China Mobile. WASHINGTON : Artificial intelligence (AI) firm DeepSeek is aiding China's military and intelligence operations, a senior US official told Reuters, adding that the Chinese tech startup sought to use Southeast Asian shell companies to access high-end semiconductors that cannot be shipped to China under US rules. Hangzhou-based DeepSeek sent shockwaves through the technology world in January, claiming its AI reasoning models were on par with or better than US industry-leading models at a fraction of the cost. 'We understand that DeepSeek has willingly provided and will likely continue to provide support to China's military and intelligence operations,' a senior state department official told Reuters in an interview. 'This effort goes above and beyond open-source access to DeepSeek's AI models,' the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to speak about US government information. The US government's assessment of DeepSeek's activities and links to the Chinese government have not been previously reported and come amid a wide-scale US-China trade war. Among the allegations, the official said DeepSeek is sharing user information and statistics with Beijing's surveillance apparatus. Chinese law requires companies operating in China to provide data to the government when requested. However, the suggestion that DeepSeek is already doing so is likely to raise privacy and other concerns for the firm's tens of millions of daily global users. The US also maintains restrictions on companies it believes are linked to China's military-industrial complex. US lawmakers have previously said that DeepSeek, based on its privacy disclosure statements, transmits American users' data to China through 'backend infrastructure' connected to China Mobile, a Chinese state-owned telecommunications giant. DeepSeek did not respond to questions about its privacy practices. 'The company is also referenced more than 150 times in procurement records for China's People's Liberation Army and other entities affiliated with the Chinese defense industrial base,' said the official, adding that DeepSeek had provided technology services to PLA research institutions. Reuters could not independently verify the procurement data. The official also said the company was employing workarounds to US export controls to gain access to advanced US-made chips. The US conclusions reflect a growing skepticism in Washington that the capabilities behind the rapid rise of one of China's flagship AI enterprises may have been exaggerated and relied heavily on US technology. 'DeepSeek has access to 'large volumes' of US firm Nvidia's high-end H100 chips,' said the official. Since 2022 those chips have been under US export restrictions due to Washington's concerns that China could use them to advance its military capabilities or jump ahead in the AI race. 'DeepSeek sought to use shell companies in Southeast Asia to evade export controls, and DeepSeek is seeking to access data centres in Southeast Asia to remotely access US chips,' the official said. The official declined to say if DeepSeek had successfully evaded export controls or offer further details about the shell companies. DeepSeek also did not respond to questions about its acquisition of Nvidia chips or the alleged use of shell companies. When asked if the US would implement further export controls or sanctions against DeepSeek, the official said the department had 'nothing to announce at this time'. China's foreign ministry and commerce ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. 'We do not support parties that have violated US export controls or are on the US entity lists,' an Nvidia spokesman said in a prepared statement, adding that 'with the current export controls, we are effectively out of the China data centre market, which is now served only by competitors such as Huawei'. Access to restricted chips DeepSeek has said two of its AI models that Silicon Valley executives and US tech company engineers have showered with praise – DeepSeek-V3 and DeepSeek-R1 – are on par with OpenAI and Meta's META.O most advanced models. AI experts, however, have expressed skepticism, arguing the true costs of training the models were likely much higher than the US$5.58 million the startup said was spent on computing power. Reuters has previously reported that US officials were investigating whether DeepSeek had access to restricted AI chips. DeepSeek has H100 chips that it procured after the US banned Nvidia from selling those chips to China, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, adding that the number was far smaller than the 50,000 H100s that the CEO of another AI startup had claimed DeepSeek possesses in a January interview with CNBC. Reuters was unable to verify the number of H100 chips DeepSeek has. 'Our review indicates that DeepSeek used lawfully acquired H800 products, not H100,' an Nvidia spokesman said, responding to a Reuters query about DeepSeek's alleged usage of H100 chips. In February, Singapore charged three men with fraud in a case domestic media have linked to the movement of Nvidia's advanced chips from the city state to DeepSeek. China has also been suspected of finding ways to use advanced US chips remotely. While importing advanced Nvidia chips into China without a license violates US export rules, Chinese companies are still allowed to access those same chips remotely in data centres in non-restricted countries. The exceptions are when a Chinese company is on a US trade blacklist or the chip exporter has knowledge that the Chinese firm is using its chips to help develop weapons of mass destruction. US officials have not placed DeepSeek on any US trade blacklists yet and have not alleged that Nvidia had any knowledge of DeepSeek's work with the Chinese military. Malaysia's ministry of investment, trade and industry said last week that it was investigating whether an unnamed Chinese company in the country was using servers equipped with Nvidia chips for large language model training and that it was examining whether any domestic law or regulation had been breached.