Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Trademark registration - How high is the success rate when the trademark acceptance notice comes down?
How high is the success rate when the trademark acceptance notice comes down?
1. How high is the success rate when the trademark acceptance notice comes down

1. How high is the success rate when the trademark acceptance notice comes down depends on whether the trademark of the party concerned meets the requirements. If only the notice of trademark acceptance comes down, then it has entered the substantive examination stage of the Trademark Office. Whether the trademark acceptance can be passed depends on whether the trademark of the party concerned meets the requirements. The notice of trademark acceptance is a certificate given to the parties by the Trademark Office after receiving the application, which is similar to a receipt.

2. Legal basis: Article 22 of the Regulations on the Implementation of the Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China

If the Trademark Office rejects an application for trademark registration on some designated goods, the applicant may divide the part of the application that has been preliminarily approved into another application, and the application date of the original application shall be retained for the divided application.

if division is necessary, the applicant shall file a division application with the Trademark Office within 15 days from the date of receiving the Notice of Partial Rejection of Trademark Registration Application from the Trademark Office.

after receiving the split application, the trademark office shall split the original application into two parts, generate a new application number for the split preliminary examination and approval application, and make an announcement.

2. What are the criteria for judging trademark infringement

1. The act of using a trademark that is the same as or similar to a registered trademark on the same or similar goods without the permission of the registered trademark owner.

2. The act of changing a registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark back on the market. This act is also called "reverse counterfeiting" in theory.

3. selling goods that infringe on the exclusive right to use a registered trademark.

4. the act of forging or manufacturing another person's registered trademark logo or selling the forged or unauthorized registered trademark logo. This kind of infringement is trademark infringement, including "manufacturing" and "selling".