The most eye-catching products at Paris's Vivatech trade fair
PARIS: Products ranging from footwear to AI counterfeit detectors fill the halls of Paris's Vivatech trade fair, which runs until June 14.
Here are some of the highlights of this year's show gathered by AFP on the scene:
Anti-counterfeiting AI
For humans, spotting the difference between a Lacoste polo shirt and a fake sporting the brand's crocodile logo can be tricky.
But French startup Vrai AI believes its artificial intelligence model can tell the two apart based on a simple photo.
"AI can detect micro-mistakes" made by counterfeit manufacturers of products like off-the-rack clothes, banknotes or even anti-malarial medications, co-founder Hugo Garcia-Cotte tells AFP.
"It's more reliable than humans," he adds.
Lacoste has been testing the AI model since November, with customs services in countries like Cameroon and Senegal also taking an interest.
Robotic telemedicine
Scooting around on castor wheels, column-shaped robots from Hong Kong firm Robocore can serve as mobile advertising billboards – but for now are mostly deployed for medical purposes in hospitals and retirement homes.
Visitors stand next to a Robocore mobile advertising robot 'Fourcast' at the 9th edition of the VivaTech technology startups and innovation fair in Paris on June 11, 2025. — AFP
"We are in about 200 elderly homes in the United States, 1,000 elderly homes in Hong Kong, and we are in a lot of hospitals as well," boss Long Hei Roy Lim tells AFP.
The robots, each a few feet high, use AI to navigate environments autonomously, including taking the lift.
They can also analyse patients' medical data and have conversations powered by chatbots from American developer OpenAI or Chinese competitor DeepSeek.
Robocore says its robots can save time for health workers, whose workload is cut to simply checking up on what the robots have distributed to patients – hopefully limiting the impact of doctor shortages.
With 50,000 units deployed across 33 countries, Robocore was hoping to expand into new markets thanks to its attendance at Vivatech.
Nimble electric vehicles
At just 79 centimetres (two and half feet) wide and 2.4 metres (seven and a half feet) long, French startup Aemotion's four-wheeled electric vehicle is designed to weave through traffic, saving commuters time spent in jams.
A car designed by Aemotion is seen at the 9th edition of the VivaTech technology startups and innovation fair in Paris on June 11, 2025. — AFP
Built in central France, the black transport that's not quite a motor scooter nor really a car is fully enclosed and can carry two people at up to 115 kilometres per hour (70 mph).
"We aim to sell 5,000 of these a year within five years," company chief Alexandre Lagrange told AFP at the company's stand, where he is showing off the third version of Aeomotion's prototype.
Pre-orders are already open for the vehicle, with the company aiming to get road licensing early next year, with a price tag of €20,000 (R M97,868 ).
The first drivers will get their hands on one in late 2026 or early 2027, co-founder Alain Dublin said.
Smart shoes
Imagine being guided on a walk around busy city streets not by brightly-coloured signs and traffic lights, but by vibrations in your feet.
That's the promise of Japanese start-up Ashirase, which has developed a vibrating tool that slips into shoes aimed at making life easier for visually impaired people.
This photograph shows Ashirase's navigation system installed in the shoes at the 9th edition of the VivaTech fair. — AFP
"We use AI for accurate positioning, by mixing the sensor data from the Ashirase device and location data from (a) smartphone," development chief Ryohei Tokuda said.
Users simply have to select a destination in the accompanying app and the buzzing inserts will let them know when to turn.
Backed by carmaker Honda, Ashirase's smart shoe upgrades are already on sale in Japan.
It hopes to bring them to Europe starting with a launch in Germany in September. – AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Pick up trash, get free stuff – Copenhagen's summer offer
Copenhagen has taken a new method in use to reduce the amount of thrash in the Copenhagen Canals: the environmental kayak (Miljoekajakken). — Photo: PETER HAUERBACH/ Ritzau Scanpix via AFP Mexican tourist Rocio Gomez spent an hour boating on Copenhagen's canals free of charge in exchange for picking up trash in the water, part of a city programme for rewarding eco-friendly tourists. During her tour on an electric motorboat, which normally costs around $95 an hour, Rocio collected trash in the Copenhagen port. "You're doing something helpful and you're also having a good time," she told AFP. The 34-year-old who works in sustainable development said she planned to take advantage of other similar deals offered in Copenhagen during her visit. From mid-June until late August, the CopenPay initiative offers around 100 activities in exchange for free or reduced prices on a selection of experiences. For example, participants can get a coffee, pastry or concert ticket in exchange for an hour of picking up trash; a rebate on a restaurant dinner if they do some gardening; or a free guided tour for those who stay in the city longer than three days. "We saw that four out of five people actually want to do good, but only one does it. So we wanted to see how we could bridge that gap and inspire more people to do good," said Rikke Holm Petersen, head of communications at the Wonderful Copenhagen tourism board. The initiative was tested on a smaller scale last year, when 75,000 people took part. This year, Wonderful Copenhagen expects at least twice as many. The number of companies and institutions taking part, and getting no financial gain in return, has increased four-fold. The campaign targets tourists but applies to anyone who wants to participate. At the motorboat rental company GoBoat, as at many other places, the offer is limited. "Around 60 people can come every Tuesday and Thursday morning" after signing up on a CopenPay website, said GoBoat's Isabel Smith. A marine biologist, Smith is in charge of analysing the trash hauled by CopenPay users, averaging two kilos per boat, most of which is plastic. "I measure the plastic by width and length, then identify the type of plastic," she said. "This will contribute to our current understanding of the role of the harbour and plastic pollution." Spread abroad? The programme has proven popular with tourists. "When you are travelling to different places, you want to experience different things. And I found that this is pretty amazing," Gomez said. "At the beginning, it was pretty clean -- extremely clean -- but then we found certain corners that were pretty dirty." "And then we started to pick up all the trash from the corners with bamboo nets." Also in her boat was Marta Reschiglian, an Italian student visiting Copenhagen with a group of friends on an Erasmus university exchange programme. "Since we are students and we are sometimes on a really tight budget, it's so nice to be able to do these things, to combine a bit of a sustainable, friendly behaviour and also a way to get things for free," Reschiglian said. "Lots of cities should start to adopt these kinds of initiatives," she added. "We are seeing all over the world that there are so many problems with mass tourism." The project could spread to other cities outside Denmark. "We've been sharing insights with 100 destinations all over the world," said Petersen at Wonderful Copenhagen. In the Danish capital, the initiative could become permanent in the future, with a winter programme as well. Around four million tourists visit Copenhagen each year, the majority in summer. cbw/ef/po/js


Malaysian Reserve
3 hours ago
- Malaysian Reserve
China can work with France over range of sectors, Wang says
CHINA is ready to cooperate with France in industries such as nuclear power, aviation, artificial intelligence, green energy and biotechnology, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said. Wang's comments in Paris capped a European visit that also took him to Brussels and Berlin. During his trip, China announced anti-dumping duties on European brandy while exempting major cognac makers that agreed to minimum price levels. That matter has been 'properly resolved,' Wang said. China also is willing to strengthen strategic communication and coordination with France on Ukraine and tensions in the Middle East, Wang said at a news conference with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot. Wang expressed the hope that France would urge the EU to address China's trade and economic disputes with the bloc and respond to its concerns, state-owned Xinhua News Agency reported on Saturday. –BLOOMBERG


The Star
12 hours ago
- The Star
Where do trade talks stand in the rush to avert higher US tariffs?
WASHINGTON (AFP): As a Wednesday deadline approaches for steeper US tariffs to hit dozens of economies ranging from the EU to India, trade negotiations with President Donald Trump's administration are coming down to the wire. The levies taking effect July 9 were announced in April, with the White House citing a lack of "reciprocity" in trade relations. But they were swiftly halted, allowing room for talks. Days before their reimposition, where do things stand? - EU: 'Ready' for deal - The European Union said it is "ready for a deal" with Washington, with the bloc's trade chief meeting his US counterparts Thursday. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said the EU was targeting an "agreement in principle" when it came to the July 9 cutoff. With no deal, the US tariff on EU goods doubles from the "baseline" of 10 percent to 20 percent -- with Trump previously threatening a 50 percent level. - Vietnam: A pact with uncertainties - Washington and Hanoi unveiled a trade pact Wednesday with much fanfare and few details, but it allowed Vietnam to avoid Trump's initial 46 percent tariff. Under the agreement, Vietnamese goods face a minimum 20 percent tariff while products made elsewhere face a 40 percent levy -- a clause to restrict "transshipping" by Chinese groups. But there remain questions on how the higher levy would apply to products using foreign parts. There is also a risk that Beijing will adopt retaliatory measures, analysts warned. - Japan: Rice, autos at stake - Despite being a close US ally and major source of foreign investment, Japan might not escape Trump's tariff hike. Tokyo's trade envoy Ryosei Akazawa has made numerous trips to Washington through the end of June. But Trump recently criticized what he described as Japan's reluctance to open up further to US rice and auto exports. "I'm not sure we're going to make a deal," Trump said, adding that the country could pay a tariff of "30 percent, 35 percent, or whatever the number is that we determine." - India: A good position - Indian manufacturers and exporters want to believe they can avoid a 26 percent tariff. Negotiations between both countries have been going well for weeks, and Trump himself suggested at the end of June that a "very big" agreement was imminent. Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations, said the feedback he received "suggests positive developments." But he maintained that the situation was fluid. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has stressed that agriculture and dairy products remain "very big red lines." - South Korea: Muted optimism - Seoul, which is already reeling from US tariffs on steel and autos, wants to avert a sweeping 25 percent levy on its other exports. Cooperation in shipbuilding could be a bargaining chip, but "at this stage, both sides still haven't clearly defined what exactly they want," said new President Lee Jae Myung on Thursday. "I can't say with confidence that we'll be able to wrap everything up by July 8," he added. - Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan in the wings - Other Asian economies including Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia, which faces a 49 percent tariff, wait with bated breath. Indonesia has indicated willingness to boost energy, agriculture and merchandise imports from the United States. Bangladesh meanwhile is proposing to buy Boeing planes and step up imports of US agriculture products. Taiwan, for whom Washington is a vital security partner, faces a 32 percent duty without a pact. Although both sides have faced bumps along the way, Taiwanese Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim said "negotiators from both sides are working diligently" to find a path forward. - Switzerland: Hope for delay - Switzerland's government said Washington has acknowledged it was acting in good faith, and assumes its tariff level will remain at 10 percent on July 9 while negotiations continue. But without a decision by the president as of the end of June, Switzerland did not rule out that levies could still rise to a promised 31 percent. - AFP