I have to disagree. If someone didn't sit down and design a product, the product wouldn't exist at all. That is the intellectual property. Designs are trademarked/copyrighted/patented (whichever applies to the situation). Yes, it helps some if you manufacture the product yourself, but only marginally. If someone in the USA rips your design off, you have legal recourse. China plays the game differently. If an item is popular enough, and China decides that the profit margins are good enough, they'll get their hands on an original and reverse engineer it. Then they'll sell that product for a little bit of nothing, which hurts the original designer.
Whether you care about the vaping industry or not, I saw the demise of many small mom & pop shops due to China ripoffs. There were quite a few small machine shops here in the US that were producing high-end hardware. They would design and manufacture the items themselves. In a way, they were like the Wolfman razors or the vaping world. Someone would send the items to China, who would in turn produce thousands of clones, and sell them dirt cheap. A high-end mechanical mod from a mom & pop could easily run you about $300, and you'd have to spend months on a waiting list to get one. Someone would get one, send it to China, where they'd be cloned and produce them by the thousands - quickly. You can guess what happened. People jumped all over the $30 mods that they could get immediately - as a result, the mom & pop businesses couldn't compete and closed their doors.
For the life of me, I can't understand how folks think it's ok for someone else's design to be stolen, just so they can get (basically) the same thing cheaply. It's morally and ethically wrong. On both ends - both the person (or company) doing the ripping off, and the people who support the counterfeit items. I can't afford a Rolex, so I don't own a Rolex. Simple as that. I'm not going to support the counterfeit industry by buying a "replica", as they like to label them. And, don't kid yourself about the quality. They are very capable of producing high quality pieces if they feel the profit margins warrant. The "replica" watches? Many are so good even trained jewelers have a difficult time distinguishing them between the authentic Rolex. I'm not saying that will be the case of the Vector knockoff, but merely stating they *can* do high quality work.
I saw some people in this thread feel that the quality of the Vector knockoff won't be as good as the original. Maybe it won't, but that's still beside the point. Shane's original design and hard work is being ripped off and devalued. His time and effort to design the products that he does, all of which are highly regarded, are well worth the price they sell for. He deserved to be compensated for it. That's his job, and it's how he makes a living. Although he doesn't produce the products himself, they are still his designs - and the Blackland line of razors wouldn't exist without his designs.
Sure, he could've avoided being ripped off by working with a Chinese manufacturing company to offer his designs at lower prices. Instead, he decided to have the razors produced here in the USA - providing jobs for others here in the USA. I wish more companies would chose to do the same, instead of looking to make a quick buck.
I'm not a fan of censorship in general, but there are certain times where something needs to be done. By showing a photo of the ripoff razor, and jokingly referring to it as the "Victor" is still advertising for it, intentional or not. It's supporting the counterfeit industry. Shane is a standup guy, who works to provide great products for those of us in the shaving hobby. I'm glad that there are still a few like him left that do their best to have products made here in the USA (creating jobs), at the highest possible quality, and provide excellent customer support.