Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Trademark in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Trademark in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 18 tháng 8, 2021

Opposition of Applications for Registration of the Mark Protection in Vietnam

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


Vietnam Law on Intellectual Property allows any third party to have right to denounces the opposition of trademark applications for registration which have identical or confusingly similar signs.

As from the date an application for registration of mark is published in the Official Gazette of Industrial Property up until prior to the date of issuance of a decision on grant of a protection title, the third party shall express the opposition to the competent State administrative body including explanations, argument and evidence the opinion. Such opinions must be made in writing and be accompanied by documents or must quote the source of information.


 

Trademark opposition in Vietnam

Opposition to trademark applications plays a great role for the protection of trademark owner that prevents counterfeiting, duplication, infringement and trademark registration in contravention of law.

Documents:

01 Power of attorney (as form)

Documents and evidences to prove the opposition bases.

(ANT Lawyers could consult client specifically and particularly about the evidences and documents).

Opposition procedures

After receiving a disapproval application for registration of mark, National Office Intellectual Property (NOIP) has a dispatch to answer the disapproval application within 10 working days from date received a dossier. NOIP also sends disapproval opinions to owners of application for registration of mark protection.

Owners of application for registration of mark protection has opinions about this disagreement and give proofs that the application for registration of mark protection is suitable with requirement of Intellectual Property law

NOIP is pursuant to argument, proof and regulation law of parties for agree or refuse to grant a protection title

Opposition dossier includes:

Disapproval declaration (02 copies following form)

Explanation documents for disagreement of protection title issue

Attachment proofs.

Power of attorney (if an application is filed through representative of owner’s mark)

Fee, charge vouchers relating disagreement following regulations in law.

Duration

There is no duration stipulation in Vietnamese law. As our usual, NOIP will take from 6 months to 9 months to examine.

If you are looking for an experienced IP services in Vietnam to help you with your Trademark application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the IP process and will work closely with you as you apply for your Trademark in Vietnam

 

Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 11, 2020

Legal consequences of the trademark with origin in Vietnam and designation EU registered under Madrid system after Brexit

BY Linh Pham IN , , , No comments


After 47 years being a member of EU, UK officially left EU on January 31, 2020. This is an almost half of century relationship, thus, there would be a number of arising confusion as well as the issue which is in need of negotiation to complete the process including trademark registration with origin from Vietnam.

 


Trademark protection in Vietnam

UK is the member of Madrid system from Dec 1st, 1995, concurrently, EU has also officially become a member of this system since Oct 1st, 2004.  According to the international trademark searching Madrid Monitor, there are 292 Vietnamese trademarks registered internationally designated EU which include both the trademarks during the examination period and granted certificate.

How is the fate of these trademarks after Brexit?

According to the guidance from Intellectual Property Office of UK (“IPO”), the owner or applicant of the trademark which submitted according to the Madrid system and designated EU need to note the following points:

International trade mark registrations protected in the EU (“EUTM”) under the Madrid Protocol will no longer enjoy protection in the UK after 1 January 2021. According to Brexit Agreement, IPO will create a system: “comparable UK trademark” in relation to each international (EU) trade mark designation. In case EUTM are still in the examination period, the applicant has the right to register that exact trademark in UK in the transition period from January 1st, 2021 to September 30th, 2021. In details:

Firstly, to the trademarks which has been protected, UK will:

-Be recorded in UK registration system;

-The recorded trademark will have the same legal status as the trademark protected according to UK law;

-Keep the submitting of the application as EUTM;

-Keep the priority date according to the Madrid system or seniority date according to UK law;

-Be recognized as independently existing trademark according to UK law and may be challenged, assigned, licensed or renewed separately from the original international registration.

However, it is noted that: (i) the Comparable trademarks will be created at no cost to the holder of the international trademark, except a minimal administrative burden will be placed upon the rights holder (ii) the applicant will not receive the trademark certificate, however, they could be searched for the trademark at GOV.UK.

Secondly, for the EUTM which are still in examination phase:

In case EUTM are still in examination phase, on January 1st, 2021, the applicant has the following rights:

-Apply the trademark application in UK for EUTM during the transition, nine months from January 1st, 2021 until September 30th, 2021 as mentioned above;

-Keep the earlier filing date as EUTM;

-Enjoy other international priority claim effecting on EUTM in accordance with the seniority claim according to UK law.

However, it is noted that when applying the EUTM during the examination phase according to the UK trademark system then:

-The trademark applied in UK must be the same with the trademark in EU application which submitted previously;

-Goods/services required to protect of the trademark must be the same or included in the scale of EUTM.

In case the application submitted into UK does not satisfy the above criteria, the application would not enjoy the priority date or the priority claim of EUTM.

The application after having been submitted within that period and satisfies the criteria will be deemed as UK application and be examined according to UK law.

If you are looking for an experienced IP services in Vietnam to help you with your IP application, you should visit ANTLawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the IP process and will work closely with you as you apply for your IP. We routinely match inventors with experienced IP attorneys for a free consultation on our platform and offer a money back guarantee. 

 

 


Thứ Năm, 30 tháng 7, 2020

Should I hire a Trademark lawyer to file trademark application?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


The answer is (almost always) “yes!”
Of the many reasons to hire a trademark lawyer for a Trademark (TM), here are few...
-The process can be time-consuming - particularly conducting an exhaustive search of existing trademarks and handling any office actions that come back. Experienced trademark and IP lawyers have successfully submitted many trademark applications, so they will be able to efficiently file your application, allowing you to focus your energy on other company matters.


-A comprehensive search of trademarks often must go beyond the USPTO’s (already difficult/confusing to search) Trademark Electronic Search System. This would be extremely difficult to accomplish without an attorney and/or professional search. It is much more cost-effective to hire a lawyer up front, than to hire one to rectify problems when you either get an office action or realize your protection wasn't as robust or complete as you'd understood.

-A trademark lawyer can help you frame your application in the best possible way (by selecting appropriate categories/drafting how it is being used/deciding whether to apply for plain text or logo protection-among many other considerations), making it more likely that your application will be granted on the first try and obtain the maximum possible protection for your company.

-Finally, a trademark or IP lawyer can help you after the process is over to help you craft a long-term IP strategy.

Source: Quora
If you are looking for a high-quality, experienced lawyer to work on trademark issues for your company, you should check out ANT Lawyers to get in touch with some of the best. ANT Lawyers - IP services in Vietnam is supported by a team of experienced patent, trademark, design attorneys with qualification and skills handling full range of legal services relating to intellectual property in Vietnam.  We have specialized in the preparation and registration of patents, trademarks and designs for our clients.
We assist our clients in all steps of the prosecution phase of IP management.


Thứ Sáu, 10 tháng 7, 2020

What is a Trademark?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


A trademark is a type of intellectual property. A trademark also commonly known as a trademark, trade-mark or a mark. A trademark consists of a recognizable sign, design, or expression which identifies products or services of a particular company and helps in distinguishing the products from those of others. The symbols ® ‘the registered trademark symbol’ and ™ ‘the trademark symbol’ are generally used to indicate trademarks; the former is only for use by the owner of a trademark which is registered.


The trademark can be owned by:
-An individual,
-Business organization,
-Or any legal entity
When a trademark is registered, it confers an exclusive right to the owner to use the registered trademark. Thus it can be said that the trademark can be used by his owner exclusively, or it can be used by a person licensed for use in return of valid consideration.

Complete assignment
In this type of assignment, all the rights are completely transferred by the owner to the assignee.
The assignee has got all the rights including rights such right to further transfer and right to earn royalties.

Partial assignment
In this type, the assignment of the trademark is made to the assignee, but with respect to only some of the goods/ services, the transfer of ownership of the trademark is restricted to specific goods or services only. The rights are not transferred completely.

Assignment with goodwill
In this type of assignment, there is also a transfer of goodwill of the product with the trademark. In this, the valuation of goodwill is calculated differently in the agreement.

Assignment without goodwill
 In this type of assignment, goodwill of the product is not transferred along with the assignment of the trademark; in this, the owner of the brand restricts the rights of the assignee and does not allow him to use such trademark of the brand for the products being used by the assignor. Such an assignment is also referred to as a gross assignment.

When can a Trademark be assignerd?
A trademark can be assigned in the following situations

The Death of the Trademark Owner
Whenever the owner of the trademark i.e. the assignor dies, its ownership is passed on to the successors of the previous owners in a will or intestate. The condition is that the Trademark must be valid and should not have been abandoned by the previous owner.

Sale of Business
 Intellectual properties are assets for the company, just like all properties, even the trademark can be sold with the company. Provided it is registered under the company’s name. If a party acquires trademark rights of a company by acquiring a business with regard to the sale of assets of the company, the intellectual properties are also said to be transferred.

Change of the owner of businesses
When two companies decide on having a merger or an amalgamation of the company, a notification is sent to the registry. All the intellectual property of the acquired company are transferred to the new owner through the trademark assignment agreement between the parties.

Change in Form of Business
Whenever a business plan on changing its form of business or its business structure an assignment is a boon for those businesses.

If you are looking for an experienced trademark attorneys in Vietnam to help you with your trademark application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the trademark process and will work closely with you as you apply for your trademark.







Thứ Tư, 8 tháng 7, 2020

What constitutes as an intellectual property?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


Intellectual Property is the Property, which has been created by exercise of Intellectual Faculty. It is the result of persons Intellectual Activities. Thus Intellectual Property refers to creation of mind such as inventions, designs for industrial articles, literary, artistic work, symbols which are ultimately used in commerce.

Intellectual Property rights allow the creators or owners to have the benefits from their works when these are exploited commercially. These rights are statutory rights governed in accordance with the provisions of corresponding legislations. Intellectual Property rights reward creativity & human endeavor which fuel the progress of humankind.

The intellectual property is classified into seven categories i.e

-Geographical Indications
-Lay out designs of integrated circuits
-Protection of undisclosed information/Trade Secret according to TRIPs agreements.

Source: Quora
If you are looking for an experienced IP attorneys in Vietnam to help you with your IP application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the IP process and will work closely with you as you apply for your IP. Hope this helps!


Thứ Ba, 7 tháng 7, 2020

What Are Obligations of Using Patent and Trademark?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


When applicants of invention or mark are granted patent or trademark certificate, they are obliged to use these subjects. The reason for this provision which is, the owner may not use patents or trademarks in practical causing difficulties for the person who would like to use the patent and trademark in reality but cannot register as others has already registered.

Firstly, to patent, the owner is be obliged to manufacture protected products or apply protected processes to satisfy the requirements of national defence and security, disease prevention, and treatment and nutrition of the people or to meet other social urgent needs. When the needs stipulated in this clause arise but an invention owner fails to perform such obligation, the competent State body may license such invention to others without permission from the invention owner in accordance with the law.
Secondly, to trademark, trademark holder is obliged to use trademark continuously. Trademark used under a trademark use agreement by a transferee is also considered as an act of using the holder’s trademark. In case the trademark is not used continuously for five years or more, the Trademark Certificate of Registration shall be invalid.
Specifically, if the trademark holder or the person who is allowed to use the trademark do not use the trademark within continuous five years before the date of request to terminate the validity without reasonable reason, except the using starts or restarts at least 03 months up to date of having the termination of validity request.
If the client needs help with handling such complaint, our Intellectual property attorneys in Vietnam at ANT Lawyers will be of help.





Thứ Hai, 22 tháng 6, 2020

What happens if I have a trademark without registering?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , No comments


Trademark registration provides protection and exclusive rights to the owner of a Trademark in relation to his goods and services used commercially.


A Trademark differentiates the identity and brand name of a business and separates the goods and services of a business from that of other similar goods or services in the market.

If your Trademark is not registered, it can be easily infringed upon by someone. In such case, you cannot file an infringement suit, but only claim remedy for passing-off. Passing off in trademark is when infringement of an unregistered trademark happens. The mark is not only deceptively similar to the trademark of other company but also creating confusion for the customers, which ultimately results in damage to the business of company.

Legal Remedy In Case Of Passing Off
The trademark owner can file a suit in district court/ High Court within the local limits of the jurisdiction, where the person instituting actually and voluntarily resides or carries on business or personally works for gain.

Where the passing off does not involve the use of trademark or where there is no sale of goods, the suit may be filed in a subordinate judge’s court or a court of superior to it. The plaintiff in a suit for passing off must be the owner of an unregistered trademark which has acquired reputation in relation to some goods or the owner of the goodwill in a trade name, or get-up relating to some goods or business or profession.

The defendant in the suit must be a person who has passed off or whose activities are likely to pass off his goods or business as the goods or business of the plaintiffs. Passing off actions may be instituted by many plaintiffs in a representative capacity provided there is a common interest, common grievance and a remedy beneficial to all. The rules governing the preparation of the plaint and the subsequent proceedings are the same as in any other suit and are governed by the Code of Civil Procedure.

If you are looking for an experienced Trademark attorneys in Vietnam to help you with your trademark application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the trademark process and will work closely with you as you apply for your trademark. We routinely match inventors with experienced Trademark attorneys for a free consultation on our platform and offer a money back guarantee.






Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 5, 2020

Is it possible to trademark a brand name if it's similar to one that exists?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , , No comments


In the United States, the key is determining whether there is a likelihood of confusion. In other words, are consumers likely to believe that the goods are made by the same person. Similarity of the marks is just one factor. Another important factor is the relatedness of the goods. If the goods are wine, for example, and you want to use a similar mark on a wine, then there would be a greater likelihood of confusion. If, however, the goods are orthopedic shoe inserts, then the likelihood of confusion is greatly reduced because few people would think that a winery made orthotics.

There is an exception for famous marks because they are so strong. For example, if you saw a bar of APPLE soap, you might not think that APPLE has gone into the soap business, but you might think of Apple computers or products. That is called “trademark dilution” because it is likely to diminish the value of the APPLE trademark. In that case, likelihood of confusion has nothing to do with the analysis.


ANT Lawyers - A Law firm in Vietnam is supported by a team of experienced patent, trademark, design attorneys with qualification and skills handling full range of legal services relating to intellectual property rights in Vietnam.  We have specialized in the preparation and registration of patents, trademarks and designs for our clients.   Please contact our lawyers in Vietnam for advice via email ant@antlawyers.vn or call our office at +84 28 730 86 529

Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 5, 2020

How Vietnamese Companies Could Register Trademark in USA?

BY Linh Pham IN , , , , , No comments


In order to expand business to the world market, the company should prepare the legal foundations before entering the foreign market or launching any products or services in another country. Many Vietnam companies aims to enter US market but there are opportunities and challenges.  One of our many issues are legal risks in intellectual properties protection law of the US. It is suggested the Vietnamese companies to consult with IP lawyers in Vietnam and US to register trademark and clear off such legal issues before launching products in the US.


              
When submitting for trademark registration in USA, individuals or enterprises need to comprehend its procedures to make the most reasonable choice.

Authority
The Vietnamese individuals and enterprises may directly file the dossiers for registration of US trademark to United States patent and trademark office (USPTO) or via Madrid System with US designation. However, if Vietnamese individuals and enterprises are not resident or do not have office in US choose to directly file the dossiers to USPTO, they must submit dossiers via a licensed US IP agent.

The required dossiers include:
-Trademark sample;
-Applicant’s information;
-Registration of goods/services;
-Filing basis.
Besides, based on each below filing basis, different dossiers would be required.
According to US Law, to the direct registration, applicant needs to file on following four basis:

1.Registration on the basis of Section 1(a). Accordingly, applicant will file the registration for the mark that already used in commerce in USA
On this basis, the applicant or their representative files used trademark application to USPTO. After 3 months from the filing date, the examiners will examine the dossiers to consider if it satisfies the protected criteria.

-If the examining attorney does not find grounds for refusing to register the trademark, and the application satisfies all legal requirements, the trademark will be approved for publication in the USPTO’s Trademark Official Gazette (TMOG) within one month for opposition. If there is no opposition or it is already resolved in regulated duration, then USPTO registers the trademark. Before the end of the first six-year period after the registration date, or within six months of the expiration of the sixth year with an additional fee, the applicant must file a Declaration of Use or Excusable Nonuse to keep the trademark alive. Besides, within one year before the end of every 10-year period after the registration date, or within six months of the end of the 10-year period, the applicant must file a Combined Declaration of Use or Excusable Nonuse/Application for Renewal.

-If the examining attorney finds grounds for refusing to register the trademark, or if the application does not satisfy all legal requirements, the examining attorney issues a letter (office action) explaining those refusals and/or requirements. The applicant must respond to the office action within six months of the date it was issued. (i) If the applicant does not respond within regulated period, the USPTO will sent to the applicant a Notice of Abandon (ii) If applicant responds in regulated time and USPTO considers it is reasonable, USPTO then approves the application and publishes it on TMOG for opposition. If there is no opposition or it is already resolved in regulated duration, then USPTO registers the trademark. If applicant responds in regulated time and USPTO considers it is unreasonable, then examining attorney will issue a final action letter. If the applicant responds in regulated time and examining attorney considers it is reasonable then USPTO registers the trademark. Via versa, if the applicant do not respond in time, the application will be abandoned.

2.Registration on the basis of Section 1(b). Accordingly, for application based on intent to use the trademark in commerce

Basically, the procedure in this case are almost the same as filing basis 1(a). However, after USPTO approves the application and publishes on TMOG, USPTO then will issue a Notice of Allowance (NOA) instead of registering the trademark. A NOA is not a registration, but means that the trademark made it through the 30-day opposition period and will be allowed to register after the applicant timely files an acceptable Statement of Use (SOU). The deadline to file an SOU or request for extension of time to file an SOU (extension request) is calculated from the date the NOA issued. If applicant does not file an SOU or extension request within six months of the NOA date, the application will abandon.

3.Registration on the basis of Section 44(d). Accordingly, for application based on a foreign application within 6 months from the date of filing in other countries
After the application is submitted, if the examining attorney does not find grounds for refusing to register the trademark, and the application satisfies all legal requirements, he or she issues a suspension letter stating that no further action will be taken on the application until we receive the foreign registration certificate, as required for a herein Section 44(e) registration basis.
If the examining attorney finds grounds for refusing to register the trademark, or if the application does not satisfy all legal requirements, the examining attorney issues a letter (office action) explaining those refusals and/or requirements.

-In case there is no response from applicant, the application will be abandoned.
-In case the applicant has reasonable response and be accepted, USPTO will issue suspension letter. If USPTO has not received the required foreign registration certificate for the Section 44(e) basis, the examining attorney will issue a letter inquiring about the status of the foreign application (whether it has registered yet). A suspension inquiry letter will be issued every six months until the applicant submit the foreign registration certificate. (i) If the applicant do not respond to the inquiry from USPTO, the application will abandon (ii) If the applicant responds in accordance with providing foreign trademark certificate, there will be the following situations:

a.In case USPTO accepts the foreign trademark certificate and the examining attorney does not find grounds for refusing to register the trademark, and the application satisfies all legal requirements, USPTO then approves the trademark and publishes it on TMOG for opposition. If there is no opposition or it is already resolved in regulated duration, then USPTO registers the trademark;

b.In case USPTO accepts the foreign trademark certificate, however, the examining attorney finds grounds for refusing to register the trademark, USPTO will issue the action letter. (i) If the applicant does not respond within 6 months, the application will be abandoned (ii) If the applicant responds within 6 months, the response will be considered: In case USPTO considers the response is reasonable, the application will be approved and published for opposition, if there is no opposition or the opinion has already been resolved, the trademark with be granted certificate; in case USPTO considers the response is unreasonable, the applicant may continue to respond to Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB).

-In case USPTO does not accept the foreign trademark certificate, USPTO will issue notification and clearly state the reason. The applicant has 6 months to respond to the notification, otherwise, the applicant will be abandoned.

4.Registration on the basis of Section 44(e). Accordingly, for application based on a foreign trademark certificate, there are two cases as following:
-The application satisfies the requirements and USPTO publishes on TMOG for opposition;
-The application does not satisfy the requirements and USPTO issues the notification and clearly states the reason.

The procedures and duration for applicant and third parties have opinions are the same as above cases. After the trademark certificate is granted, the applicant needs to submit SOU and pay the fee to maintain.