Trademark infringement
Text: Trademark infringement Article 52 of the Trademark Law, Article 5 of the Regulations for the Implementation of the Trademark Law and Article 1 of the Interpretation of the Supreme People's Court on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Laws in the Trial of Trademark Civil Disputes stipulate several forms of trademark infringement: (1) counterfeiting or counterfeiting; (2) selling goods infringing trademark rights. The main body of such infringement is a commodity dealer, regardless of whether the perpetrator is subjectively at fault or not, as long as it is implemented. Paragraph 3 of Article 56 of the Trademark Law stipulates: If you sell a commodity that you don't know is an infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark, you can prove that the commodity was legally obtained by yourself and explain the supplier, and you will not be liable for compensation. (3) Forging or unauthorized manufacturing of another person's registered trademark logo or selling a forged or unauthorized registered trademark logo (4) Changing its registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark on the market is also called reverse counterfeiting and trademark replacement. (5) Acts that cause other damages to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others. 1. Misleading the public by using marks identical or similar to others' registered trademarks as commodity names or commodity decorations on the same or similar commodities; 2. Deliberately providing convenient conditions such as warehousing, transportation, mailing, concealment, etc. for infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others; 3. Prominent use of words that are identical or similar to other people's registered trademarks as the name of the enterprise on the same or similar goods is likely to mislead the relevant public; 4. Copying, imitating or translating a well-known trademark registered by others or its main part used as a trademark on different or similar goods, misleading the public, and possibly damaging the interests of the registrant of the well-known trademark; 5. Registering words identical with or similar to other people's registered trademarks as domain names, and conducting e-commerce of related commodities through this domain name, which is likely to mislead the relevant public.