Taobao, the leading Chinese online marketplace backed by Alibaba, has attracted some serious flames over the products on their platform. The siteโ€™s penchant for grey market goods has ignited global rows over the companyโ€™s responsibility for everything from fake handbags to counterfeits drugs.

Following a very public rejection from the worldโ€™s largest nonprofit anti-counterfeit organization, and a slap on the wrist from the U.S. Trade Representative in December, Alibaba has being running an all-out anti-counterfeiting campaign, and their latest weapon is millennials.

This week the company held a Taobao โ€˜Maker Festivalโ€™, inviting 72 millennial merchants with a focus on self-made brands. Alibaba is hoping to โ€œshift the siteโ€™s reputation as a consumer-to-consumer sales channel to a lifestyle destination,โ€ according to the companyโ€™s blog.

It suggests Taobao is attempting to directly attract the kind of merchant their platform categorically repelled in the past: those seeking to make money out of original items.

For that to happen, the countryโ€™s young consumers and merchants will have to first overcome the price sensitivity that has fueled Taobaoโ€™s growth โ€“ along with its fake goods problem.

According to the company, 70 percent of the platformโ€™s 369 million monthly active users are in their 20s and 30s, with a majority accessing the site on their mobile. Alibaba and Taobao are banking on these young buyers to shell out a little extra for original brands.

The products hosted at the Taobao Maker Festival event included 3D-printed jewelry, a foldable guitar and even a bamboo bicycle, which has already become a well-known standard among the trendier Beijing crowd.

โ€œItโ€™s about exploring something through making it rather than buying it,โ€ said David Wang, creator of Bamboo Bicycles Beijing in Alibabaโ€™s blog.

While itโ€™s undeniable that Chinaโ€™s growing middle class is birthing a movement of more conscientious shoppers, it remains to be seen whether a budget marketplace stalwart like Taobao is nimble enough to change course.

Image Credit: Alizila

Cate is a tech writer. She worked as a journalist in Australia, Mongolia and Myanmar. You can reach her (in Chinese or English) at: @catecadell or catecadell@ovau.ip-ddns.com

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