acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

ACM Careers

Researchers ­se Machine Learning to Spot Counterfeit Consumer Products


View as: Print Mobile App Share:
New York City's Canal St.

Credit: The Curtis J. Exclusive

A team of researchers has developed a mechanism that uses machine-learning algorithms to distinguish between genuine and counterfeit versions of the same product.     

 

The work, led by New York University Professor Lakshminarayanan Subramanian, is described in "Fake vs Real Goods Problem: Mirosocopy and Machine Learning to the Rescue," presented at the annual ACM SIGKDD Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining.

"The underlying principle of our system stems from the idea that microscopic characteristics in a genuine product or a class of products — corresponding to the same larger product line — exhibit inherent similarities that can be used to distinguish these products from their corresponding counterfeit versions," says Subramanian, a professor at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences.

The system described in the paper is commercialized by Entrupy Inc., an NYU startup founded by Ashlesh Sharma, a doctoral graduate from the Courant Institute, Vidyuth Srinivasan, and Subramanian.   

Counterfeit goods represent a massive worldwide problem with nearly every high-valued physical object or product directly affected by this issue, the researchers note. Some reports indicate counterfeit trafficking represents 7 percent of the world's trade today.

While other counterfeit-detection methods exist, these are invasive and run the risk of damaging the products under examination.

The Entrupy method, by contrast, provides a non-intrusive solution to easily distinguish authentic versions of the product produced by the original manufacturer and fake versions of the product produced by counterfeiters.

It does so by deploying a dataset of three million images across various objects and materials such as fabrics, leather, pills, electronics, toys, and shoes.

"The classification accuracy is more than 98 percent, and we show how our system works with a cellphone to verify the authenticity of everyday objects," Subramanian says. 

To date, Entrupy, which recently received $2.6 million in funding from a team of investors, has authenticated $14 million worth of goods.

The SIGKDD paper is authored by Srikanth Jagabathula, Lakshminarayanan Subramanian, and Ashwin Venkataraman.


 

No entries found

Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account