Luxury
fashion brand #Gucci has warned stores in Hong Kong to stop
selling paper handbags and other goods that resemble their products as
offerings for the dead.
"In this instance, we fully respect the funeral context and we trust
that the store owners did not have the intention to infringe Gucci's
trademark," the company said in a statement emailed to AFP on Friday.
"Thus a letter was sent on an informational basis to let these stores
know about the products they were carrying, and by asking them to stop
selling those items," the statement said, adding that there was no
suggestion of legal action or compensation.
"Gucci needs to protect its intellectual property, and does this across industries globally."
Traditionally, Chinese would purchase and burn paper replicas for their
ancestors, especially during the tomb-sweeping day, which was on April 4
this year.
These paper fakes include a wide variety of goods, from paper false
teeth, iPads and shirts, to chauffeur-driven cars, macaroons, mansions
and wads of fake cash.





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