Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Trademark registration - Which of the following countries is very taboo to use portraits as trademarks?
Which of the following countries is very taboo to use portraits as trademarks?
Existing laws include the Trademark Law, which came into effect on June 3 1994, and the Trademark Law 1994, which was revised on June 3 1996 and June 1998 respectively. British trademarks include Great Britain, Northern Ireland, Isle of Man and british indian ocean territory, but exclude Ireland and the Channel Islands. Trademark review in Britain only carries out absolute reasons review, not relative reasons review. According to the provisions of Section III of the Trademark Law, registration shall not be granted under the following circumstances.

1 does not conform to the definition of trademark in the first section of the Trademark Law.

2. Lack of meaning

3, directly describe the characteristics of commodity category, quality, quantity, etc.

4. It has become the lingua franca in the current language.

5, in violation of social norms and moral standards

6, deceptive quality or source of goods and services.

7. The trademark application is malicious.

8. Include any marks, portraits, etc. Something to do with the royal family.

9. National flag and emblem, regional flags of England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Isle of Man, badges of international organizations, military symbols, etc.