Christian author says $240G worth of fake copies of her book sold on Amazon
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A female priest said Amazon sold $240,000 worth of counterfeit copies of her faith-based book before it was removed from the site.
Tish Harrison Warren, a priest in the Anglican Church in North America, is the author of "Liturgy of the Ordinary: Sacred Practices in Everyday Life," her first book, which took her three years to complete.
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The author said she found out from her publisher, InterVarsity Press (IVP), that the book was copied and sold by a third-party on Amazon for about nine months.
IVP estimates 15,000 fake copies were sold before a customer complained in June, alerting them to the scheme totaling over $240,000 in lost revenue for Warren.
“It’s a huge loss of money for my family. Percentage-wise of what I make as a writer, it’s an enormous amount of that," Warren told Christianity Today, a day after she learned about how large-scale the fraud was, and she later asked her readers on her blog to pray and thanked them for reading her book "whether your copy was legitimate or not."
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The New York Times reported in June that there was a surge of counterfeit books on Amazon.
Amazon removed the re-sellers of the counterfeit editions from its stores after IVP filed a formal complaint through the Seattle-based tech company's standard protocols.
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"We are grateful for Amazon’s response to our complaint and its expressed openness to hear directly from us if we encounter counterfeit editions in the future," IVP wrote in a statement. "We consider Amazon a valued trade partner and recognize the extraordinary place it occupies in the global supply chain for books."
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Warren's publisher invested in a new service that allows them to monitor who is controlling the Amazon buy button as fake third-party sellers is not always a sign of counterfeiting. The company hopes this will alert other publishers to the issue of counterfeits and for customers to be more aware.