China once stole foreign ideas. Now it wants to protect its own
The country’s courts are inundated with intellectual-property cases
CHINESE officials are at war with a fiendish little creature that stands about six inches tall and bears a striking resemblance to a Labubu doll, the sensational plush toy created by China’s Pop Mart. Factories around the country are churning out knock-offs known as “Lafufus”.
The infestation has prompted a nationwide “Lafufu-catching” campaign as officials conduct raids and shut down online shops that sell them. Shanghai police hit a jackpot in July when they discovered a local company sitting on a stash of the fake toys worth 12 million yuan (S$2.2 million).
China has long been a counterfeiting hub. Shoppers do not have to look far to find fake Nestle food seasoning or imitation Nike sneakers. And brands are not the only form of intellectual property (IP) that is readily pilfered.
TRENDING NOW
Yeo’s, Tiger Beer and now Gardenia – flight of food manufacturing from Singapore might be just as planned
Xi Jinping has just rewritten the rules of US-China rivalry
Brewing success: How three brothers turned Brewerkz Group’s fortunes around
‘Even a CEO’s job can be replaced by AI’: DBS CEO Tan Su Shan bets big on agentic AI