Considered infringement.
The infringement scenarios are as follows: 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. The "use" here refers to any use of the trademark with the goods. Related behaviors mainly include directly displaying trademarks on goods through printing, stamping, spraying, etc. or attaching items displaying trademarks to goods. The former is like the trademark on unpackaged soap, and the latter is like most goods. Trademark on packaging. In addition, the use of trademarks in commercial documents and commercial advertisements also constitutes use of trademarks.
2. As a product dealer, those who sell products that infringe the exclusive rights of registered trademarks may sell a single product or thousands of products. The dealer cannot master the information of each product. It is impossible to tell the authenticity of all goods sold without trademark registration status. Therefore, while the law stipulates that the sale of goods that infringe the exclusive rights of a registered trademark is an act of infringement of a registered trademark, in order to protect the legitimate interests of legitimate operators, the law provides special provisions on the tort liability of the seller of goods, that is, the sale of goods without knowledge of the infringement is an act of infringement. For goods with exclusive rights to registered trademarks, if the legitimate source of the goods can be proven, they will not be liable for compensation. However, if the legitimate source of the goods cannot be proven or the goods are intentional, that is, if the goods sold are knowingly infringing the exclusive right of a registered trademark, the person shall be liable for compensation.
3. Forgery or unauthorized production of other people’s registered trademarks or sales of counterfeit or unauthorized production of other people’s registered trademarks. Counterfeiting refers to the production of other people’s goods through plagiarism and imitation without the registrant’s knowledge or authorization. Registered trademarks; unauthorized production generally refers to the act of manufacturing trademark signs without the authorization of the trademark registrant who has a trademark use licensing relationship or entrusts the printing of trademark signs with the trademark registrant.
4. Without the consent of the trademark registrant, the act of changing the registered trademark and putting the goods with the changed trademark back into the market is usually called "reverse counterfeiting", which is harmful in that it hinders others from counterfeiting. Use of registered trademarks. Using a mark that is identical or similar to another's registered trademark as a trade name or product decoration on the same or similar goods to mislead the public. According to the interpretation of the relevant departments, "misleading the public" does not require actual misunderstanding, as long as Its use in a manner likely to cause misunderstanding constitutes infringement. The premise of deliberately providing warehousing, transportation, mailing, concealment and other convenient conditions for infringing the exclusive rights of others' registered trademarks is that the perpetrator has subjective intention, otherwise it will not constitute an infringement.
5. Causing other damage to the exclusive right to use registered trademarks of others.