What are the infringements stipulated in the trademark law?
Torts stipulated in the Trademark Law generally include the following types: 1. Counterfeiting registered trademarks. Including the use of the same or similar trademarks with other people's registered trademarks on the same or similar goods. 2. Selling goods that infringe trademark rights. 3. Forge or make a registered trademark logo of others without authorization or sell a forged or made registered trademark logo without authorization. 4. Reverse counterfeiting. That is, 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. Note that the commodity must be put into the market again. If it is not put into the market but used by itself, it does not constitute reverse counterfeiting. 5, causing other damage to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others. Including: (1) misleading the public by using the same or similar logo as the name or decoration of another person's registered trademark on the same or similar goods; (2) Deliberately providing convenient conditions such as warehousing, transportation, mailing and hiding for infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others; (3) prominent use of words that are the same as or similar to other people's registered trademarks on the same or similar goods as the name of the enterprise, which is likely to mislead the relevant public; (4) Copying, imitating or translating a well-known trademark registered by others or its main parts used as trademarks on different or similar goods, misleading the public and possibly damaging the interests of the registrant of the well-known trademark; ⑤ registering words that are the same as or similar to other people's registered trademarks as domain names, and conducting related commodity transactions through this domain name, which is likely to mislead the relevant public.