Legal subjectivity:
If you print a trademark on behalf of someone else, you will be subject to relevant administrative penalties. If the circumstances are serious, you will bear certain criminal liability. Therefore, when printing a trademark, you need to find out whether the other party has ownership of it, otherwise there will be certain legal consequences if there is infringement. Anyone who commits any of the following acts is an infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark: (1) Using a trademark that is identical or similar to the registered trademark on the same or similar goods without the permission of the trademark registrant; (2) Selling an infringement goods for which a registered trademark has exclusive rights; (3) Forging or manufacturing registered trademarks of others without authorization or selling counterfeit or unauthorized registered trademarks; (4) Replacing the registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and the replacement trademark The goods are put into the market again; (5) Causing other damage to others’ exclusive rights to registered trademarks. Legal objectivity:
Article 52 of the Trademark Law of the People’s Republic of China shall constitute an infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark if any of the following acts occurs: (1) Without the consent of the trademark registrant (2) Selling goods that infringe the exclusive rights of a registered trademark; (3) Forging or making without authorization the registered trademark logo of others or selling forged or making without authorization; Registering a trademark mark (4) Changing the registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark back into the market (5) Causing other damage to the exclusive right of others to register the trademark.