TL;DRAbstract
Abstract Intellectual property lawyers are normally far more interested in the civil 12.01 law of trade marks rather than in the criminal offence provisions of the Trade Marks Act 19941 and tend to consider trade mark use in the civil infringement context only. The criminal liability which may result from the infringement of a registered trade mark is usually only briefly discussed.2 However, the increase of prosecutions for criminal infringement of registered trade marks, the possibility of a maximum sentence of ten years’ Trade Marks Act 1994 c.26. In the following, section numbers refer to the Trade Marks Act 1994 if not stated otherwise.
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Abstract Intellectual property lawyers are normally far more interested in the civil 12.01 law of trade marks rather than in the criminal offence provisions of the Trade Marks Act 19941 and tend to consider trade mark use in the civil infringement context only. The criminal liability which may result from the infringement of a registered trade mark is usually only briefly discussed.2 However, the increase of prosecutions for criminal infringement of registered trade marks, the possibility of a maximum sentence of ten years’ Trade Marks Act 1994 c.26. In the following, section numbers refer to the Trade Marks Act 1994 if not stated otherwise.
Keywords
Chat
Click to start Chat