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Does it count as an infringement of the Little Yellow Duck trademark if it has only the head of the little yellow duck without letters?

Not necessarily.

An infringing trademark refers to a trademark that is suspected of infringing upon the legal rights of others.

Trademark infringement refers to: the perpetrator uses the same or similar trademark on the same or similar goods without the permission of the trademark owner, or otherwise interferes or hinders the trademark owner from using its registered trademark , behavior that damages the legitimate rights and interests of the trademark owner.

Some infringers believe that directly using other people’s trademarks is clearly prohibited by law, so the infringers use other people’s trademarks as their own business names.

In 2002, the Supreme Court passed a judicial interpretation and clarified that using someone else’s registered trademark as one’s own business name is likely to cause misunderstanding and is deemed to be an infringement of trademark rights.