Seems Legit: iPhone Stoves Seized in China
If you're going to try to get away with hocking fake merchandise, you should probably start by plastering pirated logos on objects that are actually made by the company you're trying to imitate. You wouldn't put a Louis Vuitton pattern on a vacuum cleaner and expect its value to surge. You wouldn't try to pass off a soldering iron as genuine Tiffany's merchandise. And you probably shouldn't try to claim that that gas stove is really an iPhone.



