Legal subjectivity:
No. Copyright is different from trademark, and the two cannot be used interchangeably. Copyright is authorship, which refers to the rights that authors of literary, artistic, and scientific works have over their works. Copyright is a type of intellectual property that consists of works in the natural sciences, social sciences, and literature, music, drama, painting, sculpture, photography, and cinematography. Article 11 of the Copyright Law stipulates that copyright belongs to the author, unless otherwise provided in this law. The citizen who created the work is the author. For works hosted by a legal person or other organization, created on behalf of the will of the legal person or other organization, and for which the legal person or other organization assumes responsibility, the legal person or other organization shall be regarded as the author. In the absence of proof to the contrary, the citizen, legal person or other organization that signs the work is the author. Legal objectivity:
Article 4 of the "Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China" If a natural person, legal person or other organization needs to obtain the exclusive right to trademark for its goods or services in the course of production and business activities, it shall apply to Apply for trademark registration with the Trademark Office. Bad-faith trademark registration applications that are not intended for use shall be rejected. Article 8 of the Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China Any sign that can distinguish the goods of a natural person, legal person or other organization from the goods of others, including words, graphics, letters, numbers, three-dimensional signs, color combinations and sounds etc., as well as combinations of the above elements, can be applied for registration as trademarks. The provisions of this Law regarding commodity trademarks shall apply to service trademarks. Article 2 of the Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China, which took effect on June 1, 2021, works by Chinese citizens, legal persons or unincorporated organizations, whether published or not, enjoy copyright in accordance with this law. Article 62 of the "Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China" refers to copyright as referred to in this law.