What you can do if your trademark is infringed is: first, determine whether there is an objective fact of damage; second, determine the illegality of the behavior; third, determine whether the existing fact of damage is Caused by illegal behavior; the fourth step is to determine whether the behavior was intentional; if after careful identification it is found that the trademark has indeed been infringed, there are three ways to solve it. 1. Negotiate with the infringing party to resolve the matter;
2. Request the industrial and commercial administration department to handle the matter;
3. File a lawsuit with the People's Court; generally speaking, resolve the matter through negotiation, or request the industrial and commercial administration department to handle the matter; There is a possibility that the management department will fail to negotiate or reach an agreement. In this case, you have to choose the way of filing a lawsuit in the People's Court.
Legal Basis
Article 57 of the Trademark Law
Anyone who commits any of the following acts shall infringe the exclusive right to use a registered trademark: (1) Using a trademark that is the same as its registered trademark on the same kind of goods without the permission of the trademark registrant; (2) Using a trademark that is similar to its registered trademark on the same kind of goods without the permission of the trademark registrant, or using it on similar goods Using a trademark that is the same as or similar to its registered trademark on the Internet, which is likely to cause confusion; (3) selling goods that infringe the exclusive rights of a registered trademark; (4) forging or making without authorization the registered trademark signs of others or selling forged or making without authorization registered trademark signs ; (5) Changing the registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark into the market; (6) Intentionally providing facilities for infringement of the exclusive rights of others' trademarks and helping others to infringe the exclusive rights of trademarks Behavior; (7) Causing other damage to others’ exclusive rights to registered trademarks.