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A business, technology, and innovation focused law firm in Dallas, Texas providing patent, trademark, trade dress,
copyright, and trade secret litigation, licensing, prosecution, and other intellectual property counseling
Trademark Counterfeiting

Trademark counterfeiting costs companies millions of dollars per year.  Trademark counterfeiting is when an actual trademark is placed on a product or associated with a service that is not the legitimate product or service offered by the trademark owner.  An example of this is knock-off designer products made in China but sold as being authentic brand product.  Trademark counterfeiting is prohibited by the federal Trademark Act, also known as the Lanham Act.  15 U.S.C. § 1114(a), Lanham Act Section 32(a).  

The Lanham Act provides for special damages in trademark counterfeiting cases.  In addition to actual damages, ill-gotten profits, treble damages, and attorney’s fees, the Lanham Act provides for statutory damages ranging between $500 and $100,000 per counterfeit good sold or if the court finds the sales to be willful, up to $1,000,000.  15 U.S.C. § 1117(c), Lanham Act Section 35(c).  The trademark owner can also seek injunctive relief to prevent trademark counterfeiting as well as a seizure order by federal marshals.  Finally, trademark counterfeiters are also subject to criminal prosecution.  

One way a brand owner can protect its trademarks and prevent trademark counterfeiting is to avail itself of eBay’s Verified Rights Owner program (VeRO).  Counterfeit goods bearing counterfeit trademarks are too often offered for sale by unscrupulous sellers to unwitting buyers and in violation of the brand owners’ trademark rights.  But eBay’s VeRO procedure allows the trademark owner to provide notice of a suspected infringing counterfeit product.  eBay will likely remove an item, thereby canceling an auction or listing, typically within 24 hours of receiving a VeRO brand owner’s notice of infringement.  Under that process, the seller may file a counter notice and if accepted, eBay requires the owner to file suit within 10 days or the listing will be reinstated.  The eBay VeRO procedure thus provides an effect process for trademark owners to stop trademark counterfeiting.  

 

 

 

 

If you are interested in additional information on counterfeit trademarks, or if you have any questions regarding trademark counterfeiting or our trademark protection services, please contact one of Dallas trademark lawyers.   We offer an array of services in the areas of intellectual property including patents, trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets as well as intellectual property litigation and enforcement.  Detailed information on these and other services is available at www.kk-llp.com.  In addition, we act as local counsel in patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret, and commercial litigation cases in the state and federal courts in the Northern District of Texas.  Further information on our local counsel practice is available at www.kk-llp.com/localcounsel



Return to Trademarks
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Username Squatting, Usersquatting, Squitting, Twittersquatting, and other forms of Brandsquatting

Intellectual Property and the Trademark Attorney

A Primer on U.S. Trademark Laws

Trademark Protection in the U.S.

Investing in a Corporate Name Search Before Adopting A Trade Name

Due Diligence Before Launching A Branding Campaign

The Basics of a Trademark Name Search

Stop Trademark Infringing and Counterfeit Goods at the Border


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