1. Is the trademark defendant designer responsible? The trademark defendant designer is responsible. The designer and the user should jointly bear the adverse consequences of the infringement. The condition for trademark infringement is that the defendants have the same subjective fault. The common fault is reflected in the communication of the same intentions between the defendants, excluding the fact that the behavior of one defendant is accidentally related to that of others. The behavior collides with each other. If it constitutes an infringement, you can entrust a lawyer to verify the true amount of the goods in accordance with the law and ask for a lighter or lighter punishment. It is recommended to promptly consult or entrust a lawyer to serve as a defender, meet with the detainee, collect favorable evidence and materials, defend according to the law, and strive for a lighter or lighter punishment. Best results. The sentencing for the crime of infringing a registered trademark focuses on the amount involved, and the specific judgment needs to be made based on the circumstances of the case. If you are not really infringing, then you need to prepare a lot of things and collect relevant evidence, such as the acceptance notice or trademark registration certificate of the trademark you use, the publicity or advertising materials of your own trademark, invoices for the import and export of goods, etc. All ready. 2. What counts as trademark infringement? Regarding the process of identification or determination of infringement of registered trademark rights, there are the following three basic steps: 1. Determine the scope of exclusive rights to a registered trademark. The scope of exclusive rights of a registered trademark is the basic basis for determining trademark infringement. All factors considered in determining whether a trademark infringement can be determined or alleged to constitute a trademark infringement revolve around the scope of exclusive rights to a registered trademark. According to the provisions of Article 51 of my country’s Trademark Law: “The exclusive right to register a trademark is limited to the trademark that has been approved for registration and the goods that have been approved for use.” Obviously, judging from this provision, the scope of exclusive rights to a registered trademark is limited to the approved trademark and the goods approved for use by the registered trademark. The scope is determined by two factors, one is the approved registered trademark; the other is the goods approved for use by the registered trademark. The combination of the two constitutes the scope of exclusive rights of a registered trademark, which also determines the standard for comparing trademark infringement with the object of the alleged infringement in order to draw a conclusion as to whether it constitutes infringement. 2. Determine the specific object of the alleged infringement. The determination of the object of alleged infringement is determined by two factors: (1) The trademark that is accused of infringement (2) The goods used in the trademark that is accused of infringement. The significance of determining the specific object of alleged infringement lies in identifying and solidifying the alleged infringement. The carrier of infringement will lay a solid foundation for the next step of comparison with the scope of protection of trademark rights. It is as important as determining the scope of exclusive rights to a registered trademark and is another comparison object for determining trademark infringement. 3. Compare the object of alleged infringement with the registered trademark and the goods for which the registered trademark is used, determine whether the trademark for alleged infringement is the same or similar to the registered trademark, and whether the goods for which the alleged infringing trademark is used are the same as those for which the registered trademark is used. Verify whether the goods used are of the same type or similar. Through the three basic steps to determine infringement, especially by comparing the alleged infringement object with the registered trademark and the goods approved for use by the registered trademark, we can determine whether trademark infringement has occurred. To sum up, if the designed trademark constitutes infringement, then the designer is also responsible. At the same time, the user and the designer are jointly infringing and must bear corresponding responsibilities. Of course, the infringement must be handled by the owner. Only after the determination is made can it be confirmed whether the other party's behavior constitutes trademark infringement, but the infringement is still relatively serious.