Vapor
At a recent press conference on easing market entry and improving
climate for doing business, the State Administration for Market
Regulation (SAMR) announced the enactment of the Rules on Regulating
Trademark Filing Acts, which was released in the form of SAMR Decree
No.17 and will be in force from December 1.
According to SAMR
Vice Minister Qin Yizhi, while executing the Trademark Law and the
Rules, SAMR and China National Intellectual Property Administration
(CNIPA) will continuously advance the trademark filing facilitation
reform, aggressively strike the illegal acts corrupting trademark
administration order and strive to generate a market climate featuring
fair competition and good faith.
The amendment of the Trademark
Law was approved by the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress on April 23 and will become law on November 1. The Rules is for
better implementation of the Law. The 19 specific provisions in the
Rules aim to regulate trademark filing acts from four aspects. First,
set up a centralized provision on trademark filing and registration acts
violating the principle of good faith that used to be peppered in
multiple articles of the Law and the newly-added ones summed up from
practice; provide specific guidelines for representation services of
trademark firms; monitor during the whole filing procedure, sanction
malicious trademark filing acts at every process and every stage of
trademark examination and adjudication. Second, list the factors taken
into consideration for examining malicious trademark filing acts and
illegal representation acts; elevate operability and transparency of
trademark examination. Third, aggressively sanction malicious trademark
filing acts and illegal representation acts; set up a fine treble of
illegal gains of the malicious trademark applicant and no more than
30,000 yuan; set up a maximum 100,000 yuan fine on trademark firms
aiding malicious trademark filing and suspension of services if offense
is deemed aggravated. Fourth, streamline trademark filing routes and
procedures and make the system easier to use for applicants; elevate
administration services.
A principal of CNIPA's Treaty and Law
Department affirmed CNIPA's always-unwavering determination in tackling
the issue on malicious trademark registration. The newly-established
concrete measures at examination and ensuing stages have shifted the
work targeting malicious registration to early stages of examination and
can effectively curb trademark squatting acts. In 2018, CNIPA opposed a
total of 100,000 irregular trademark applications at examination and
opposition stages, effectively upholding the regular trademark
registration order.
Source: China IP News
Editor:Vapor