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Interpretation of Article 52 of Trademark Law
Deceptive trading behavior, also known as counterfeiting behavior, is the behavior that operators use counterfeiting, counterfeiting or other false means to confuse or mislead the counterparty in order to obtain trading opportunities. Deceptive trading behavior has the following forms:

(1) Counterfeiting a registered trademark of others-Article 52 of the Trademark Law;

1. Without the permission of the registered trademark owner, using the same or similar trademark on the same or similar goods;

2. Selling goods that infringe upon the exclusive right to use registered trademarks of others;

3. Forging or manufacturing others' registered trademarks without authorization, and selling forged or manufactured registered trademarks without authorization;

4, without the consent of the trademark registrant, change its registered trademark and put the goods with the changed trademark on the market again.

5, causing other damage to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others:

(1) On the same or similar goods, the use of words or graphics identical or similar to the registered trademarks of others as the name or decoration of the goods is enough to cause misunderstanding;

(2) Deliberately providing convenient conditions such as warehousing, transportation, mailing and concealment. For infringing upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others.

(two) unauthorized use of the same or similar name, packaging and decoration as well-known commodities, causing confusion;

(three) unauthorized use of another person's enterprise name or font size, so that people mistakenly believe that it is another person's goods;

(four) forgery or fraudulent use of quality marks, forgery of origin, misleading false representation of the quality of goods.