Our dedicated team employs strategies to identify and address online counterfeit activities, ensuring your intellectual property rights are protected across digital platforms.
Upon detecting infringement or counterfeit activity, we swiftly initiate takedown procedures and work with online platforms to remove infringing content and counterfeit listings.
We pursue legal action against individuals or entities responsible for producing or distributing counterfeit goods, including cease and desist letters, litigation, and coordination with law enforcement.
Our team develops comprehensive brand protection strategies tailored to the digital landscape, ensuring your trademarks are robustly defended online.
We handle domain name disputes, to combat cybersquatting and unauthorized use of your trademarks in domain names.
We monitor and address trademark infringement on social media platforms, where brands are increasingly vulnerable to counterfeit and misuse.
We provide education and training to your team on recognizing and reporting counterfeit and infringement activities, fostering a proactive approach to brand protection.
Our approach to Counterfeit and Online Infringement is dynamic and multifaceted, reflecting the evolving nature of digital threats. We combine legal expertise with technological tools to offer comprehensive protection for your brand in the digital world, ensuring that your intellectual property rights are respected and enforced across all online platforms.
A trademark is a word, phrase, symbol, or design capable of distinguishing the goods or services of one enterprise from those of other enterprises.
Registering a trademark grants the owner exclusive rights to use it on their goods or services, and legal protection against unauthorized use. It also helps in building brand identity and trust with customers.
Yes, slogans and logos that distinguish a company’s goods or services can be trademarked, provided they meet the criteria for trademark protection, such as distinctiveness and non-descriptiveness.
The duration of trademark protection varies, but it generally lasts for 10 years from the date of registration. It can be renewed indefinitely upon payment of renewal fees.
The ™ symbol is used to denote an unregistered trademark, while the ® symbol indicates a registered trademark.
Domain names can be trademarked if they function as a brand identifier for goods or services and meet other trademark criteria.
Trademark infringement occurs when a trademark is used without authorization in a manner that causes confusion, deception, or mistake about the source of goods or services.
While it’s not mandatory to hire a lawyer, professional legal assistance can be beneficial in navigating the complexities of trademark law and the registration process, and ultimately save you time and resources.