"putting into the market" in reverse counterfeiting trademark infringement should refer to "putting into the market for sale".
Item (5) of Article 57 of the Trademark Law defines the trademark infringement of reverse counterfeiting: if a registered trademark is changed without the consent of the trademark registrant and the goods with the changed trademark are put on the market again, it constitutes reverse counterfeiting and is an act of infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark. Therefore, to constitute trademark infringement, reverse counterfeiting must meet two conditions at the same time: (1) changing the registered trademark on the commodity; (2) put the goods with changed trademarks into the market again. It is easy to identify the change of registered trademark in practice, but it is difficult to identify the "entering the market" in the second condition intuitively.
2. Counterfeiting other people's high-quality goods as samples for display does not constitute "entering the market" or trademark infringement.
3. Counterfeiting other people's goods as samples constitutes false propaganda.
Authenticity is a major principle of honest business practices, and prohibiting fraud is a major content of fair competition. Market operators make misleading representations or statements about the characteristics of their products, such as quality, function and use, which not only cheat consumers, but also unjustly rob customers of competitors in the same industry, disrupt the fair and orderly competition order and constitute unfair competition behavior of false propaganda. As long as the defendant's behavior is misleading to consumers, it constitutes false propaganda and the unfair competition behavior must be stopped; If the defendant's behavior is subjectively at fault, he shall bear civil liability such as compensation for losses.