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How to judge similarity in trademark infringement
Legal subjectivity:

A trademark infringes upon the prior rights of others, or preemptively registers a trademark that has been used by others and has certain influence by unfair means, then the trademark is infringed. In addition, Article 57 of the Trademark Law also stipulates a variety of trademark infringements. Article 32 of the Trademark Law Article 57 of the Trademark Law

Legal objectivity:

Article 57 of the Trademark Law commits any of the following acts, which are all violations of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark: (1) using a trademark identical to its registered trademark on the same commodity without the permission of the trademark registrant; (2) Without the permission of the trademark registrant, using a trademark similar to its registered trademark on the same kind of goods, or using a trademark identical with or similar to its registered trademark on similar goods is likely to cause confusion; (3) selling goods that infringe upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark; (4) Forging or unauthorized manufacturing of registered trademark marks of others or selling forged or unauthorized registered trademark marks; (five) without the consent of the trademark registrant, the registered trademark is changed and the goods with the changed trademark are put on the market again; (6) Deliberately facilitating the infringement of the exclusive right to use a trademark of others and helping others to commit the infringement of the exclusive right to use a trademark; (seven) causing other damage to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others.