Recently, the war between Simba and Kuier, the two major anchors of Kuaishou, has started again. It can be described as a big battle in the Kuaishou e-commerce circle, attracting countless people who want to eat melon. Simba Kui'er is both a well-known e-commerce company on the Kuaishou platform. But in this case of "collision" of goods from South Korea, who is colluding with whom? In fact, the grudge between the two has been forged a long time ago, and the actions of one party will inevitably lead to arguments on the part of the other party.
Simba is flourishing in the Kuaishou e-commerce circle, and it is no exaggeration to say that it is number one. Kui'er has her own brand at the age of only 26, but her sales on the Kuaishou platform are not as good as Simba's. The two parties officially complained about the horse oil soap infringement incident. Simba once sold horse oil soap on the platform and the sales volume was considerable. Kui'er announced that the horse oil soap on the market infringed on the horse oil soap brand of its "Tian Qi" group, and may sue some of the infringements. In e-commerce, Simba was questioned about plagiarism. To this end, Simba responded that it was his wife Chu Ruixue who brought horse oil soap into the Chinese market, and asked Kui'er to produce a patent certificate. Since then, the two have often fought openly and secretly on live broadcasts.
Another big battle took place at the Haining Fur Festival at the end of September. Simba was live broadcasting goods at a low price in the fur city and learned that Kui'er was using fur in stock to sell at a lower price. Later, Simba live broadcasted and angrily scolded an e-commerce company for imitating him. In the evening, Kui'er live broadcasted and angrily accused Simba of stepping on others to gain power. The two started a live broadcast to curse each other, so the live broadcast permission was blocked by the platform.
On October 18, Simba went to South Korea to bring goods. Kui'er said in the live broadcast that she had revealed in a live broadcast in June that she was going to South Korea in October, but canceled it in order to avoid conflict with Simba's schedule. , alluding to Simba's trip to Korea to imitate himself. Simba responded that some e-commerce companies were not worth imitating, and also expressed his disdain for malicious competition in live streaming.
E-commerce is as deep as the sea. Who is "offending" whom, or is it "offending" each other? The public is just guessing. Presumably only the parties involved know best. Whether it is the various previous incidents or this Korean "porcelain" incident, it is nothing more than the source of the struggle for interests among e-commerce companies. As a qualified Internet user, you should make reasonable judgments about e-commerce and be civilized. ?