A trademark license contract refers to a contract in which the trademark owner pays the licensee to license his registered trademark to others. The trademark owner or its authorized person is the licensor and the other party is the licensee. After the trademark licensing contract comes into effect, the licensor does not lose the trademark right and remains the owner of the registered trademark. The object of a trademark license contract is the "right to use" of a registered trademark, not the "ownership", which is the difference between a trademark license and a trademark transfer contract.
Legal objectivity:
Article 470 of the Civil Code stipulates that the contents of a contract shall be agreed by the parties, and generally includes the following clauses: (1) the name and domicile of the parties; (2) Subject matter; (3) quantity; (4) quality; (5) Price or remuneration; (6) Time limit, place and method of performance; (7) Liability for breach of contract; (8) Methods for resolving disputes. The parties may conclude a contract by referring to the model texts of various contracts.