Protection of a Well-Known Trademark

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POPULAR WELL-KNOWN TRADEMARKS

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Why Should I Use Zenplusconsultants for Protection of Well-Known Trademarks?

Let's face it… Just because your brand is a household name doesn't mean your trademark is safe? Unless… You get It declared as a ‘well-known trademark’ through Zenplusconsultants. We can help in the protection of well known trademarks in just 3 easy steps.

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Fix an appointment with our trademark experts to resolve all your queries

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As per the process, provide all the required documents. Our team will initiate the required paperwork

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Concept of Well-Known Trademarks

According to the Trademarks Act of 1999, well-known trademarks have gained significant popularity among the public. Consumers may assume a connection when a competitor uses a similar mark, leading to customer loss. To prevent this, popular brands are granted trademark status.

What Are the Different Types of Trademark ?

A trademark is a symbol, word, or group of letters and numbers that a business uses to claim ownership of a term or visual representation of its goods and services. Basically they are classified into five different types.

Product Trademark

This is a kind of mark placed directly in the goods rather than the service. This kind of trademark is used to identify the product's place of origin and supports a company's reputation. Given that they represent goods, trademark applications filed under trademark class 1-34 may be referred to as product marks.

Service Mark

A service mark, like a product mark, is used to distinguish a service from a product. The primary goal of this service mark is to effectively differentiate the owner and other service providers.

Shape Mark

Shape marks are solely used to protect a product's shape so that customers would link it to a particular manufacturer and decide to buy the goods.

Model Mark

These products have distinctive design patterns that are mandatory for identifying the product. Only the patterns that stand out as a unique mark are allowed to have this type of recognition.

Sound Mark

A sound mark is a noise that can be connected to a good or service coming from a specific vendor. People must be able to quickly and easily recognise the service, product, or show that the sound stands for in order for it to be registered as a sound mark.

Difference Between Trademark and Well-Known Trademark
Trademark Well-Known Trademark
A trademark can be a word, sign, symbol, or even a graphic that is used to identify a company, its products, or its services from those of its rivals. This is the typical definition of a trademark. Under the Trade Marks Act of 1999, a mark is classified as a 'well-known trademark' if it has gained significant popularity among a substantial portion of the public who uses the associated goods or services and recognizes the trademark extensively.

They may end up assuming that there is a connection between the already present goods and the competitor goods using the same mark. In layman terms a well known trademark is something that is very much popular like Puma or Nike.

Factors Determining Well-Known Trademark
  • Awareness of the mark among relevant public groups
  • The duration, and location of a trademark
  • The overall time period of the trademark’s promotion
  • The length of the registration, the areas covered, and the history of successful use of the mark in other jurisdictions.
Well-Known Trademarks and Law in India

Rolex Sa v. Alex Jewellery Pvt Ltd & Ors, CS(OS) 41/2008

Because the defendant was using the name ‘Rolex’ on their bogus jewellery boxes, the plaintiff Rolex, a Swiss watch company, filed a lawsuit against the defendant for trademark infringement. The court forbade the defendant from using the plaintiff's trademark because it was well-known and highly esteemed and because doing so would lead to confusion among consumers who would incorrectly think that the jewellery was made by the plaintiff's company ‘Rolex SA’.

Microsoft Corporation v. Kurapati Venkata Jagdeesh Babu, CS(OS) 2163/2010 & I.A. No.14225/2010

The defendant in this case was prohibited by the esteemed Delhi High Court from utilszing the term 'Microsoft' due to its global recognition and esteemed reputation. The court ruled that the defendant cannot adopt the name of the well-known trademark as their own, considering the plaintiff's trademark holds distinct goodwill and reputation.

Tata Sons Ltd. v. Manoj Dodia, CS(OS) No. 264/2008

In this case, the defendant Manoj Dodia, the owner of Durga Scale Company, was sued by the plaintiff Tata Sons Ltd, a well-known manufacturer of cars and heavy vehicles, for the violation of the TATA trademark. The defendant operated a business that manufactured scales with the A1 TATA mark. The plaintiff sought rescue of the infringing equipment, a permanent injunction, harms, and an accounting. The defendant was forbidden by the court from utilising the plaintiff's trademark because he was trying to capitalise on the established brand name's goodwill. Due to the plaintiff's well-known and established brand name both within India and internationally, the court granted a permanent injunction as well as punitive damages totaling.

Well-Known Marks and Their Protection

The majority of nations protect well known marks from regular trademarks that are deemed to be a reproduction, imitation, or translation of those marks only if those marks are likely to cause confusion in the relevant market.

Protection for well-known trademarks and marks that are registered in good faith are provided by Section 11 of the Trademark Act, 1999. According to Rule 124 of the Trademark Rules, anybody may submit an application for the registration of a well known mark.

Well-Known Trademark Case Laws

Trademark Rules 2017

The trademark registry doesn't allow registration of trade marks that are identical as that of a well known trademark. Additionally, it organises the criteria for identifying well-known trademarks through a different application. Anyone seeking to determine whether a trademark is submit an application to the registrar after paying ₹1,000,000 in TM-M form.

The Trademark Act, 1999

In 1998, India subsequently put her signature on the Paris Convention's instrument of accession. According to Rule 124 of the Trademark Rules, anybody may submit an application for the registration of a well known mark. It declares that all popular trademarks for goods and services must be protected.

Section 11(6) of the Trademark Act addresses the requirement of factor consideration prior to the determination of a well-known trademark. In order to protect well known trademarks WIPO opted foreign joint resolution resulting in the protection of well known trademarks in 1999.

The Trademark Act's Section 11(7) states that when determining whether a trademark is known or recognised in the applicable section for the purpose outlined in Subsection, the number of actual or positional customers of goods and services, the number of individuals involved in the distribution channel system, and the business circle dealing with the goods and services to which the trademark shall apply should adhere to all the factors that are taken into account. The prerequisites that are not necessary to determine whether a trademark is covered by Section 11(9) of the Trademark Act.

Well-Known Trademark Case Laws

Safeguards Advertising and Branding Investments

All firms must invest in branding and advertising due to the intense competition in today's markets. Businesses invest in a range of advertising platforms, such as the internet, newsprint, radio, and TV, to advertise their brand to consumers. A well-known trademark can help in safeguarding the investments and provide greater ROI.

Protects Against Unethical Competition

This serves as an effective weapon in the fight against unfair competition is a trademark registration. Today's market is filled with copycats and counterfeiters that profit from brands that have been dishonestly used.

The Enforcement of Trademark Registrations Against Company Name

According to the Companies Act of 2013, a company's name cannot be the same as or nearly the same as a registered trademark. The names that the business plans to use in the future can be blocked using this clause. A trademark and a business name cannot be the same or very similar. As a result, once a trademark is registered, a corporation cannot be created under the same name.

Criteria for Well-Known Trademarks
  • The general Indian population is aware of the trade mark
  • How many people working in the channels used to distribute the goods or services
  • How many customers are there, either current or upcoming, for the products or services
  • The area, scope, and duration of any such trademark usage
  • The sector of the economy that deals with their goods or services.
List of Well-Known Trademarks
  • Coca-Cola
  • Pepsi
  • IBM
  • Samsung
  • Nokia
  • Microsoft
  • Intel
  • Sony
  • LG
  • Adidas
  • Reebok
  • Puma
  • Nike
  • FedEx
  • HP
  • Canon
  • Nikon
  • Panasonic
  • Mitsubishi
  • Honda
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Well-Known Trademark Case Laws

We are pioneers in protecting the popular! Yes, our team of experts can effectively complete the whole process of trademarks registration in just a few steps. Get on call with a trademark registration expert and resolve all your queries. Our team will provide a complete road map to the whole process and help you with all the compliances. All this at fantastic affordable prices.

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