Legal analysis: Not included. In our country, laws and regulations have no explicit provisions on parallel imports related to trademarks. Judicial policies regarding parallel imports of trademarks adhere to the principle of international exhaustion of trademark rights, that is, as long as the trademark owner or licensee agrees to use the trademark When the goods with its trademark are put on the market, the owner and licensee of the trademark right will lose control over it and their rights will have been exhausted. The trademark owner has no right to interfere with how anyone resells the product after legally acquiring it. Judging from most cases, as long as the importer imports through formal customs declaration procedures and domestic sales comply with other regulatory policies, it is basically difficult to be found to constitute trademark infringement.
Legal basis: Article 43 of the "Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China" A trademark registrant may license others to use its registered trademark by signing a trademark license contract. The licensor shall supervise the quality of the goods used by the licensee using its registered trademark. The licensee shall ensure the quality of the goods using the registered trademark. If the registered trademark of another person is used with permission, the name of the licensee and the place of origin of the goods must be marked on the goods using the registered trademark.