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How to identify market chaos?
How to identify market chaos behavior is as follows:

1, counterfeiting the registered trademark of others. It is not only unfair competition, but also infringement on the exclusive right to use trademarks of others.

2. Confuse with well-known commodities. Well-known commodities, registered trademarks and famous commodities. Unauthorized use of the unique name, packaging and decoration of well-known commodities. Using the name, packaging and decoration similar to those of well-known commodities+makes buyers mistake them.

3, unauthorized use of other people's enterprise name or font size, making people mistakenly think that it is someone else's goods.

4. False statement. Forge or fraudulently use quality marks such as certification marks and brand-name marks on commodities, forge the place of origin, and make misleading false representations about the quality of commodities.

First, confusion.

Confusion behavior refers to the behavior that operators make false representations, explanations or promises about their own goods or services in various false ways in market operation activities, or improperly use other people's intellectual labor achievements to publicize their own goods or services, so as to make users or consumers misunderstand, disrupt market order and harm the interests of competitors or consumers in the same industry.

Commercial confusion refers to the behavior that operators use false commercial signs to engage in market transactions, which confuses their own goods or goods or services that serve competitors, causing or enough to cause buyers to misunderstand and purchase by mistake.

Second, the purpose of market confusion behavior

Is to confuse the goods, businesses or services of other operators, and the consequences of the behavior have caused or may cause market confusion. Judging from the purpose of market confusion behavior, the reason why the implementer of this behavior wants to fake or imitate the commercial marks, commodity names, outer packaging and decoration of other people's products.

The purpose is to confuse one's own goods, business or service with others' goods, so that people can't distinguish them correctly, thus causing buyers to misunderstand and buy by mistake; Judging from the results of market confusion behavior, this behavior objectively or very likely caused confusion among commodities, businesses or services, and the consequences of confusion have occurred or are very likely to occur.

In practice, the perpetrator of market chaos is the infringer, and the chaotic operator is the victim. Therefore, confused operators rarely consider protecting the interests of another victim "buyer" who does not necessarily exist but may exist when seeking legal relief to safeguard their own rights and interests.