Fashion
Due diligence: MEPs reject a further weakening of the legislation
Published
October 23, 2025
On Wednesday, the European Parliament rejected the mandate requested by the Legal Affairs Committee regarding the Omnibus 1 directive, which sought to negotiate a further simplification of the rules on sustainability and due diligence.
The vote was 309 in favour and 318 against the Committee’s approach, with 34 abstentions. On November 13, MEPs will now vote on the simplification of the rules on sustainability and due diligence.
Following this vote, discussions will be held with the various European governments. The aim is to finalise the legislation by the end of 2025.
MEPs rejected the latest amendments proposed by the Legal Affairs Committee in part because they further weakened the text. The Committee proposed applying the duty of vigilance only to companies with more than 5,000 employees and an annual turnover of at least €1.5 billion, compared with 1,000 employees and €450 million in the initial version.
In addition, the Committee argued that companies breaching these rules should not be subject to civil liability at EU level.
The duty of vigilance voted in April 2024 was already a much-diluted version of the original draft, now limiting its application to very large companies. The companies concerned are required to prevent, identify and remedy human and social rights violations (child labour, forced labour, and safety) and environmental damage (deforestation and pollution) across their value chains worldwide, including among their suppliers, subcontractors and subsidiaries.
A step backwards had begun at the start of the year. France, which regularly boasts of having been a pioneer in this field with its own national duty of vigilance, had itself begun to slow progress on the European text. In May, the French President himself called for the European duty of vigilance proposal to be scrapped.
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Fashion
G-III Apparel lifts full-year earnings guidance despite 9% sales decline
Published
December 10, 2025
G-III Apparel on Tuesday raised its full-year earnings forecast on the back of better-than-expected earnings in the third quarter, which also saw the U.S. firm’s sales drop 9% to $988.6 million.
The New York-based firm logged earnings of $80.6 million, or $1.84 per diluted share during the three months ending October 31, compared to $114.8 million, or $2.55 per diluted share, in the prior year’s third quarter.
While profits were lower than the same period last year, the owner of Karl Lagerfeld, Sonia Rykiel, and DKNY brands, “delivered a strong third quarter with gross margins and earnings far exceeding our expectations,” according to said Morris Goldfarb, G-III’s chairman and chief executive officer.
“This was driven by the strength of our go-forward portfolio, particularly our owned brands, as well as a healthy mix of full-price sales and our mitigation efforts against tariffs. I am pleased with how our brands are resonating with consumers and encouraged by the solid demand we have seen throughout the holiday season to date,” continued Goldfarb, who said his company is raising its fiscal 2026 earnings guidance to “reflect our third quarter outperformance tempered by the uncertainties around the consumer environment and tariff-related margin pressures.”
In June, G-III Apparel filed a $250-million lawsuit against PVH Corp., escalating tensions between the two fashion giants with allegations of breached licensing agreements and interference in business relationships.
The complaint, filed in New York state court, targets PVH and its Calvin Klein Inc. and Tommy Hilfiger licensing divisions.
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Fashion
What legal challenges does the fashion industry face in the age of generative AI?
Published
December 10, 2025
From safeguarding intellectual property to securing their own use of artificial intelligence, the fashion industry is still finding its feet with AI. Unsurprisingly, the topic took centre stage at the Assises Juridiques de la Mode, du Luxe et du Design, held in Paris on December 9 and organised by Lexposia.
“In 2024, we submitted 2.5 million reports of counterfeit content to platforms,” explained Nicolas Lambert, LVMH’s director of online brand protection. “That’s nothing new, but AI has made it increasingly easy to generate infringing content. At the moment, for example, we’re seeing a proliferation of online ads for counterfeit Advent calendars from Sephora, Dior and other group brands.”
Alexandre Menais, general counsel for the L’Oréal group, was also on hand to bear witness to this acceleration. In his view, the growing presence of this new technology calls for fresh thinking about interactions between the company and the machine, and in particular how those interactions are used.
“With an intelligent agent, the question arises of who owns that interaction,” stressed the legal expert. “One of the risks I see is that the rules companies set, which mandate the use of closed AI, will be widely flouted. Many employees will be tempted to test AI outside the established framework.”
Christiane Féral-Schuhl, a lawyer specialising in this field, identified this risk as well. For the former bar chair and former president of the Conseil National des Barreaux, it is urgent to raise employees’ awareness of the differences between a closed AI, trained on creations and data for which rights‑holders have given their consent, and an open AI system. The latter dispenses with rights‑holders’ consent by relying on the “text and data mining” (TDM) exception.

“These AIs are ogres that swallow up all this ‘training data’, and to counter this you can build your own AI system, using protected data within a controlled framework. If an employee prefers to use an open system, they feed the machine and, in effect, share their work and creations with others — including their competitors — who may exploit it to produce infringing works.”
Féral-Schuhl also emphasised the questions to be asked of AI tool suppliers. Some stipulate in their terms that a customer’s work may be used to improve the service for all customers — which, in a creative context, should obviously be prohibited.
Frédéric Rose runs IMKI, which designs bespoke generative AI for brands such as The Kooples and G-Star. The specialist notes that AI is becoming more sophisticated. “It will soon be able to draft patterns and technical execution files,” he estimates. “It’s already getting more and more precise, and is becoming capable of specifying materials, fabric weights (grammage) or stitching types.”
This level of detail now makes it possible to spot counterfeits — for rights‑holders and consumers alike.
“Some AIs have safeguards and refuse to respond, but others give you suggestions on where to find the best dupes,” said Lambert. “Between the AI and the customer, it’s a private channel that I can’t investigate. But maybe tomorrow AI will be able to identify suspicious behaviour. Perhaps we need to imagine, as with YouTube, a DMCA‑style mechanism (a rights‑holder takedown mechanism, editor’s note) preventing an AI from pointing users to a counterfeit product.”

“And if AI is exploited for creative purposes, we also need to define red lists of iconic elements, specific signatures, which could lead a creation to resemble that of an established brand,” said Féral-Schuhl.
She also points to the emergence of “watermarking” (or digital tattooing) of data used to train AI, which could in time be subject to copyright protection and prevent its use in AI agents’ creative processes. This comes on top of “information tagging” that records the date and place of AI‑generated creations.
The vice‑president of French unicorn Mirakl, which develops marketplaces for major retailers, Hugo Weber, for his part, spoke about the contribution AI could make to already highly efficient algorithms.
“Amazon Prime is not a logistics issue: if you’re delivered the next day, it’s because in 95% of cases your purchase was already in shipping, because the algorithm is very efficient,” summarised the specialist.
He also cautioned against turning the Shein case into a trial of marketplaces, pointing out that European, American and Chinese players all have different notions of responsibility.
The Shein case was also raised by Benoît Loutrel, chair of the online platforms working group at ARCOM (Autorité de Régulation de la Communication Audiovisuelle et Numérique).
“We’re moving from preventive action by regulators to enforcement action by the courts. I think that the next stage will involve civil law, particularly in the case of artificial intelligence,” said the specialist.
Faced with the rise of ARCOM equivalents in other European countries, he hopes to see French digital sovereignty anchored within the broader European Union framework now taking shape.
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Fashion
Farm Rio launches festive ‘hot or cold’ campaign, adds Carnaby Street installation
Published
December 9, 2025
Do you prefer your Christmas in a hot or cold climate? No bother, Farm Rio has both covered with its Holiday Season 2025 campaign.
‘Glad to be together, wherever you celebrate’ is the philosophy behind the fashion retailer’s global campaign “that unites both hemispheres in one vibrant ‘cheers’”!
The campaign fits in well with the brand’s “passion for culture in all its forms” ethos, “design[ing] clothing for life’s happiest moments… that moves effortlessly from sand to snow, from creative winter layers to the ease of summer warmth”.
Set between Rio de Janeiro’s Ipanema beach and Europe’s Alps, the campaign “plays with contrasts, remixing local traditions and celebrating the joyful, festive maximalism that defines the season”.
New York, Paris, and London appear as key destinations, each unveiling a limited-edition printed tote bag and T-shirt as “colourful souvenirs of this global spirit”.
But this isn’t all. At the heart of the season campaign is The Farm Rio Gift Shop, a one-stop shop offering over 100 gift ideas including “everything you need for everyone you love”, from bags, scarves, homewares, to cards and mugs.
To complete the season, the brand recently launched its Holiday Capsule featuring “sleek tailoring, bodycon silhouettes, and glossy fabrics featured across bold rose prints and 3D embellishments.
To celebrate the season, selected store windows, including London’s Carnaby Street, also feature luminous installations in partnership with Pirilampos do Planeta co-design project, committed to responsible socio-environmental practices.
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