Technology | eBay Luxe Knockoffs Cost eBay $63M French court favors Louis Vuitton; auction giant may boost anti- counterfeit measures By Jonas Oransky Posted Jun 30, 2008 4:48 PM CDT Copied A model wears a creation by British fashion designer John Galliano for Dior's Haute Couture fall-winter 2008/2009 fashion collection, presented in Paris, Monday June 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon) A French court sided today with couturier Louis Vuitton in a suit against eBay, ruling the auctioneer must pay $63.1 million in damages for fake goods sold on its site—a ruling the Wall Street Journal says will force eBay to step up anti-counterfeiting protections. EBay says it will appeal the judgment, its second recent defeat in French courts. EBay has defended itself by pointing to a program that allows companies to report suspicious items, but the Paris judge was unsatisfied. “It is clear that eBay has become a focal point for certain brand owners' desire to exact ever greater control over e-commerce," the company fired back in a statement. Read These Next Brazilian influencer is dead at 27 after cosmetic surgery. Trump aide gives punny response to Springsteen. Mexico's missing count is moving in the wrong direction. Conan O'Brien finally speaks on deaths of Rob and Michele Reiner. Report an error