Without knowledge, it is impossible to determine the source trademark infringement.
Types of Trademark Infringement First of all, Article 52 of the Trademark Law stipulates five acts of infringing on the exclusive right to use a registered trademark: (1) using a trademark identical with or similar to its registered trademark on the same or similar goods without the permission of the trademark registrant. (2) selling goods that infringe upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark; (3) Forging or unauthorized manufacturing of registered trademark marks of others or selling forged or unauthorized registered trademark marks; (four) without the consent of the trademark registrant, the registered trademark is changed and the goods with the changed trademark are put on the market again. This behavior is also called "reverse imitation". (5) causing other damage to the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others. Secondly, Article 50 of the Regulations for the Implementation of the Trademark Law stipulates that any of the following acts is an act of infringement of the exclusive right to use a registered trademark as mentioned in Item (5) of Article 52 of the Trademark Law: (1) It is misleading to use the same or similar mark as another person's registered trademark on the same or similar goods; (2) Deliberately providing convenient conditions such as warehousing, transportation, mailing and concealment. For infringing upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark of others. Third, 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 stipulates that the following acts are acts that cause other damages to the exclusive right to use registered trademarks of others as stipulated in Item (5) of Article 52 of the Trademark Law: (1) Significantly using the same or similar words as the registered trademarks of others as the company name, which is easy to mislead the relevant public; (2) Copying, imitating or translating a well-known trademark registered by others or a major part of it as a trademark on different or similar goods, misleading the public and possibly harming the interests of the registrant of the well-known trademark; (3) It is easy to mislead the relevant public by registering words identical with or similar to other people's registered trademarks as domain names and conducting related commodity transactions through the domain names.