Trademark infringement can be complained to the Trademark Management Office of the Municipal Administration for Industry and Commerce or the Trademark Advertising Contract Management Section of the Industrial and Commercial Branch, and can also be brought to the people's court. Where a request is made to the administrative department for industry and commerce, a written request shall be issued. The written request shall specify the cause of the request, the legal basis of the request, the name and address of the claimant, the name of the infringer and the place where the infringement occurred. Foreigners or foreign enterprises shall entrust a trademark agency with foreign-related agency. The following written materials shall be submitted for trademark infringement complaints: (1), complaints. List the respondent, the respondent's address, infringement facts, complaint requirements and legal basis, as well as the complainant's name, address, contact telephone number, complaint date and relevant documents of the agent. (2) Business license. If a copy is submitted, the original issuing authority shall affix its official seal. (3) trademark registration certificate. Where a copy is submitted, the official seal of the administrative department for industry and commerce at or above the county level where the trademark owner is located shall be affixed. (4) Evidence of infringement, including infringing articles, trademarks, relevant bills or photos, etc. However, complaints under any of the following circumstances will not be accepted: (1), and the respondent is unknown. (2) The facts of the alleged infringement are unclear. (3) The complaint documents provided are incomplete and have not been completed for more than three days. (4), beyond the jurisdiction of the administrative department for Industry and commerce at the same level. (five) the complainant filed a civil lawsuit with the people's court on the same fact. What should I do if I find trademark infringement? First of all, I should pay attention to the collection of evidence. Because only in the case of sufficient evidence, it is beneficial for administrative law enforcement organs or judicial organs to determine whether an act belongs to infringement as soon as possible. Therefore, evidence is the premise of handling a case. The procedural law stipulates that all facts that prove the true situation of a case are evidence. Therefore, we should strictly abide by this principle when collecting evidence. In other words, we should try our best to find evidence related to the case that can prove the true situation of the case. Trademark issues need to be handled by themselves, especially trademark infringement. I am the most direct victim. If I can't handle it properly, the economic value and commercialization of the trademark will be affected. So I have to operate the program according to the relevant regulations, but the focus on specific details is the core of the problem.
Legal objectivity:
Article 57 of the Trademark Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) 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.