On your side, I suggest you add a question.
But generally speaking, safeguarding rights can be divided into several steps:
1. Send a lawyer's letter.
A simple, accurate, factual and logically correct lawyer's letter can clearly describe the facts of the other party's infringement and your requirements. This lawyer's letter has the function of legal proof and can also play a warning role in reality.
2. Complain to the local administrative department for industry and commerce.
The administrative department for industry and commerce, as the administrative department in charge of trademark management, is an important authority entrusted by law to investigate and deal with violations of the exclusive right to trademark registration. The administrative department for industry and commerce shall perform this statutory duty according to law, which needs to be further clarified in the law.
You can complain to the local administrative department for industry and commerce, ask it to investigate and deal with the infringement according to law, and order it to stop the infringement. If the defendant fails to perform, the administrative department for industry and commerce may request the court to enforce it according to law.
3. Bring a trademark infringement lawsuit to the people's court.
Civil litigation is the last remedy for trademark owners after trademark infringement. The main purpose of civil litigation is to make the infringer stop the infringement and solve the problem of compensation for the economic losses and rights protection expenses suffered by the obligee.
These three measures are basic measures. Of course, with the development of the Internet, some complaints can also be made online, which requires specific analysis of specific issues.