MarkMonitor Brandjacking Index Exposes Online Scams That Threaten Top Pharmaceutical Brands and Hurt Consumers.Majority of Online Pharmacies tr.v. jeop·ard·ized, jeop·ard·iz·ing, jeop·ard·izes To expose to loss or injury; imperil. See Synonyms at endanger. Consumer Data SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden -- MarkMonitor[R], the global leader in enterprise brand protection, today released the Summer 2007 Brandjacking Index[TM], reporting that online scammers increasingly abuse the top-ranked brands and endanger en·dan·ger tr.v. en·dan·gered, en·dan·ger·ing, en·dan·gers 1. To expose to harm or danger; imperil. 2. To threaten with extinction. consumers by selling questionable prescription drugs prescription drug Prescription medication Pharmacology An FDA-approved drug which must, by federal law or regulation, be dispensed only pursuant to a prescription–eg, finished dose form and active ingredients subject to the provisos of the Federal Food, Drug, through dubious online pharmacies. In the case of prescription drug sites that sell the most popular brands, the report showed the majority operate without proper credentials and lack even the most basic e-commerce security features, risking customers' health and putting their personal information at risk. "The data shows brandjackers are profoundly exploiting brands, using increasingly sophisticated tactics, and, in the case of the pharmaceutical industry, posing an outright danger to consumers through questionable practices that indicate counterfeiting counterfeiting, manufacturing spurious coins, paper money, or evidences of governmental obligation (e.g., bonds) in the semblance of the true. There must be sufficient resemblance to the genuine article to deceive a person using ordinary caution. and gray markets," said Irfan Salim, president and chief executive officer of MarkMonitor. "Caveat emptor [Latin, Let the buyer beware.] A warning that notifies a buyer that the goods he or she is buying are "as is," or subject to all defects. When a sale is subject to this warning the purchaser assumes the risk that the product might be either defective or on the part of consumers is not a sufficient response to the depredations of online scammers and thieves; brand holders must shoulder the responsibility of protecting their brands online from the highly-developed and ever-evolving threats that brandjackers pose." The quarterly MarkMonitor Brandjacking Index is an independent report that measures the effect of online threats to brands and investigates trends, including drilled-down analysis of how the most popular brands are abused online and the industries in which abuse is causing the most damage. In addition to ongoing tracking of 30 leading brands as identified by Interbrand, the summer report includes a research focus on online abuses of pharmaceutical brands, including an investigation of the counterfeit/gray market for popular prescription drugs. The report's drug and online channel abuse data for the online pharmaceutical market is based on six leading drug brands: three of the highest ranking drug products according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the "Top 200 Brands for 2006 by US Sales" study by Drugs.com and three of the most frequently searched drug products online. Following are select findings from the MarkMonitor Summer 2007 Brandjacking Index: Online sales of fake, expired or gray-market drugs are big business and illicit practices breed health and security risks * Of the 3,160 online pharmacies studied, only four are accredited accredited recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria. accredited herds cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g. as Verified Internet Pharmacy internet pharmacy Online A website that offers prescription drugs from the comfort of home Cons The IP or prescribing physician may not be qualified or licensed to prescribe drugs in all states. See Operation Cure-All, VIPPS. Practice Sites (VIPPS VIPPS Verified Internet Pharmacy Practice Sites ), the industry credential that assures consumers of legitimate online pharmacy operations. * 10 percent of the online pharmacies studied clearly state no prescription is required to purchase the drugs. * 59% of these 3,160 pharmacies were hosted in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , followed by the United Kingdom which hosted 18% of the pharmacies. * More than 50 percent of them do not secure customer data, putting consumers' identity information at risk. The majority does not use SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) The leading security protocol on the Internet. Developed by Netscape, SSL is widely used to do two things: to validate the identity of a Web site and to create an encrypted connection for sending credit card and other personal data. encryption and more than 20 percent of post-purchase emails captured in the MarkMonitor analysis contained links to unencrypted customer data. * One-third of the online pharmacies in the study generate enough traffic to merit an Alexa ranking. Each of these sites sees an average of 32,000 visitors daily. Using industry statistics for traffic conversion and average order sizes, MarkMonitor estimates that this traffic converts to $4 billion in annual sales for the six drug brands studied. * Representative sampling of pricing for one popular drug brand shows an average of $10.85 for VIPPS-accredited sites in contrast to an average price of $2.72 for non-accredited sites. These deep discounts are significantly higher than the known channel allowance and strongly point to questionable drug products. * Exchange sites that sell pharmaceuticals in bulk quantities by the pill risk corrupting the overall drug supply chain by injecting potentially phony and dangerous medications into the market. Analysis of just 21 exchange/trade sites shows 75 million individual pills available for sale for the six drug brands studied, which, according to conservative estimates, equals a $150 million wholesale market for those six brands alone. * 31 percent of exchange site listings originated in China followed by 26 percent in the United States and 19 percent in India. "Criminals around the world continue to show a remarkable degree of adaptability and flexibility as they take advantage of the Internet to hijack well-known brands to steal funds, rob identities, launch major profit centers for counterfeit To falsify, deceive, or defraud. A copy or imitation of something that is intended to be taken as authentic and genuine in order to deceive another. A counterfeit coin is one that may pass for a genuine coin and may include a lower denomination coin altered so that it may and gray-market goods and conduct other nefarious activities," said Frederick Felman, chief marketing officer for MarkMonitor. "Brand holders are left with the incredible burden of preserving the integrity of their brand on the Internet to protect their reputations, revenues and customers." The cornerstone of the Brandjacking Index is the volume of public data analyzed by MarkMonitor using the company's proprietary algorithms; no customer data or proprietary customer information was used to create the Brandjacking Index. The MarkMonitor Summer 2007 Brandjacking Index searched approximately 134 million public domain records daily for abuse findings for Interbrand-ranked brands between April and June, 2007. The phishing Pronounced "fishing," it is a scam to steal valuable information such as credit card and social security numbers, user IDs and passwords. Also known as "brand spoofing," an official-looking e-mail is sent to potential victims pretending to be from their ISP, bank or retail establishment. data MarkMonitor analyzes is based on feeds and fraud broadcasting from leading international Internet Service Providers Internet service provider (ISP) Company that provides Internet connections and services to individuals and organizations. For a monthly fee, ISPs provide computer users with a connection to their site (see data transmission), as well as a log-in name and password. (ISPs), e-mail providers and other alliance partners covering 671 million e-mail inboxes; the company processes up to 16 million unique phishing e-mails daily. Trends for the pharmaceutical study are based on electronic forensic analysis of billions of Web pages and 60 million e-mail solicitations (spam) captured over a four-week period in June including 110,902 individual spam landing sites, 3,160 online pharmacies and 390 exchange/trade board listings. Note to Editors For complete Brandjacking Index results or more information concerning methodology, contact Te Smith at 831-818-1267 / te.smith@markmonitor.com or Jonathan Jordan at 202-370-6187 / jjordan@ar-edelman.com. About MarkMonitor MarkMonitor, the global leader in enterprise brand protection, offers comprehensive solutions and services that safeguard brands, reputation and revenue from online risks. With end-to-end solutions (jargon) end-to-end solution - (E2ES) A term that suggests that the supplier of an application program or system will provide all the hardware and/or software components and resouces to meet the customer's requirement and no other supplier need be involved. Compare: turn-key solution. that address the growing threats of online fraud, brand abuse and unauthorized channels, MarkMonitor enables a secure Internet for businesses and their customers. The company's exclusive access to data combined with its real-time prevention, detection and response capabilities provide wide-ranging protection to the ever-changing online risks faced by brands today. For more information, visit www.markmonitor.com. MarkMonitor[R] is a registered trademark of MarkMonitor, Inc. All other trademarks included herein are the property of their respective owners. |
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