| I'm glad too and grateful for the second chance on the article! > I just have a difficult time seeing how it could be cost-effective, without being eye-wateringly expensive. We write the guides first, which 'earns' us the 'audacity' to claim we know how to authenticate. I thought of the academic world so as to prove the expertise (I'm the complete opposite of an academic) * We write public guides (see: https://legitcheck.app/explore-the-library/) - we have about 1m words written on the subject * People are free to contest it. If we're wrong, we'll correct * The more other people link to our guides, the more we get... credentials, I guess? > you can't have a fashion purse expert determining whether an "antique" firearm (where forgery is a big problem) We don't really get that far, into firearms and the such. Currently we do sneakers, clothing, watches, bags and some collectibles (e.g. Pokemon Cards) > I'd assume the biggest value would be to contract with auction houses or appraisers, where the workflow would be familiar We've worked occasionally with some (e.g. authenticated a pair of $20,000 Jordans: https://legitcheck.app/certificate-of-authenticity/property-... But mostly B2C, so it's a consumer-focuseed service > But I guess if it's really just sending links to Amazon listings The products we're authenticating are mostly 'asset products', so items that are $300+, most of the time sold-out, have some resale value over retail OR retain more of their retail value than usual items (think: Chanel items) |
Fakes can be very convincing and genuine manufacturing processes can be very variable.