1. A certification trademark refers to a mark controlled by an organization with the ability to supervise goods or services and used by units or individuals outside the organization to prove the origin, raw materials, manufacturing methods, quality or other specific qualities of the goods or services;
2. A commercial trademark refers to a trademark in which producers or business operators use a specific logo or enterprise name on the goods they manufacture or operate. Some people call this logo "yes"? Factory logo? 、? Shop logo? Or? Standard? ;
3. Grade refers to the same trademark or different trademarks used on goods of different quality, specifications and grades;
4. A family trademark is a trademark used on various commodities of the same enterprise on the basis of a certain trademark, combined with various words or graphics, also known as? Derivative trademark? ;
5. Standby trademarks, also known as storage trademarks, refer to the simultaneous or separate registration of several trademarks on the same or similar goods, which may not be used immediately after registration, but stored first and then used when necessary;
6. Combination trademarks refer to several trademarks used to distinguish similar goods due to different varieties, specifications, grades and prices, and these trademarks are applied for registration as a group at one time. There are similarities between collective trademarks and grade trademarks;
7. Joint trademarks refer to several identical or similar trademarks registered by the same trademark owner on the same or similar goods, some of which are similar in words and some in graphics. These trademarks are called joint trademarks. This kind of similar trademark shall not be used after registration, and its purpose is to prevent others from counterfeiting or registering, so as to protect their own trademarks more effectively;
8. Advertising trademarks, as the name implies, are trademarks used for publicity;
9. The common sense of defensive trademark registration refers to the fact that the owner of a well-known trademark registers his trademark on non-similar goods in order to prevent others from using his trademark on different kinds of goods. This kind of trademark is called defensive trademark.