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二〇二四年一月至二〇二五年六月——全国检察机关起诉涉电商领域相关犯罪一万余人
Ren Min Ri Bao·2025-07-27 22:09

Core Viewpoint - The Supreme People's Procuratorate has reported an increase in illegal activities within the e-commerce industry, which severely infringes on consumer rights, disrupts fair market competition, and affects the healthy development of the e-commerce sector [1]. Group 1: E-commerce Crime Trends - From January 2024 to June 2025, over 10,000 individuals will be prosecuted for crimes related to the e-commerce sector [1]. - Compared to traditional counterfeit crimes, selling counterfeit goods through e-commerce channels has lower infringement costs, updated marketing models, more concealed sales channels, and greater governance challenges [1]. - A case involving Xu and others selling counterfeit registered trademark products through a live-streaming platform resulted in sales exceeding 2.7 million yuan [1]. Group 2: Personal Information Violations - The e-commerce industry, which encompasses communications, logistics, retail, and the internet, holds vast amounts of personal information, leading some practitioners to illegally obtain and sell this data [1]. - In one case, an individual used their position in an e-commerce business department to sell over 300,000 cross-border shopping order details [1]. - Another case involved an individual exporting and selling large amounts of shopping cache data from an e-commerce platform [1]. Group 3: Live Streaming Fraud - Some criminals exploit live-streaming platforms, using the difficulty consumers have in verifying the authenticity of products to conduct scams [2]. - In a case involving Du and Shi, they impersonated agents of a top South African jewelry brand, created fake certificates, and sold "three-no" products as authentic jewelry, promising high buy-back prices [2]. - After receiving payments, the perpetrators would disappear and re-register under new accounts, continuing their fraudulent activities [2].