Using the same or similar trademark on the same commodity without the permission of the trademark registrant is a trademark infringement. Similar goods mentioned in this article; Refers to the use of the same goods as the approved registered trademark. Similar goods refer to goods that consumers can't identify the source in terms of functions, uses, raw materials, sales channels, consumers, producers and operators, which leads to mistaken recognition and purchase. The same trademark is visually indistinguishable or slightly different; Approximate trademarks refer to trademarks that are not easy to distinguish and confuse as a whole.
Selling goods that infringe the exclusive right to use a registered trademark is a trademark infringement. Refers to the commodity seller selling goods that infringe the exclusive right to use a registered trademark, which belongs to trademark infringement and may not be sold. However, it is not easy for every dealer to know about the use of trademarks of thousands of goods. Therefore, we must correctly understand and apply the provisions of this law in light of the actual situation. Without authorization, forging or manufacturing another person's registered trademark logo, or selling forged or manufactured registered trademark logo, is a trademark infringement. What needs to be emphasized here is that the tangible carrier of a trademark is a trademark logo. As a symbol to distinguish the source of goods, trademark identification plays a role in identifying goods through trademark identification. Requirements include packaging, labels, seals, instructions, certificates and other items with trademarks. Because a trademark is the carrier of the exclusive right to use a trademark, it is trademark infringement to forge or manufacture another person's registered trademark or sell these trademarks without authorization.
Without the consent of the trademark registrant, it is a trademark infringement to change the registered trademark without authorization and put the goods with the changed trademark back on the market. Trademark infringement refers to the act of changing a trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant in business activities. The so-called commercial behavior is to put the goods on the market after changing the trademark. Acts that cause other damage to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others also belong to trademark infringement. It can be seen that the most basic feature of infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark is the damage to the exclusive right to use a trademark of others.