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Can changing the font of a trademark cause infringement?

Yes, it counts as infringement. The important component of a word trademark is the font. If the trademark has been registered and used, and someone else registers it, even though the fonts are different, but the meaning is consistent, it still constitutes infringement. For trademark infringement parties, the parties can require them to stop their behavior and compensate for losses. Anyone who infringes upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark may complain or report to the industrial and commercial administration department at or above the county level where the infringer is located or where the infringement occurred.

Legal Basis

Article 57 of the Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China

Anyone who commits any of the following acts shall be deemed to have infringed upon the registration. The right to exclusive use of trademarks: (1) Using a trademark that is the same as its registered trademark on the same product without the permission of the trademark registrant; (2) Using a trademark that is similar to its registered trademark on the same product without the permission of the trademark registrant trademark, or using a trademark that is identical or similar to its registered trademark on similar goods, which is likely to cause confusion; (3) selling goods that infringe the exclusive rights of registered trademarks; (4) counterfeiting, making without authorization or selling counterfeit trademarks registered by others , making a registered trademark logo without authorization; (5) changing the registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark into the market; (6) intentionally providing facilities for infringement of the exclusive rights of others' trademarks, Helping others to infringe the exclusive rights of trademarks; (7) Causing other damage to others' exclusive rights to registered trademarks.