The products are exactly the same, but the trademarks are different, which does not necessarily constitute infringement. It also depends on whether the two trademarks are similar enough to easily cause confusion among the relevant public. According to the provisions of the Trademark Law, acts that infringe upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark mainly include the following: 1. Using a trademark that is identical or similar to the registered trademark on the same or similar goods without the permission of the owner of the registered trademark. Behavior. 2. The act of changing the registered trademark without the consent of the trademark registrant and putting the goods with the changed trademark back on the market. This behavior is also called "reverse counterfeiting" in theory. 3. Selling goods that infringe the exclusive rights of registered trademarks. Combined with the provisions of the Trademark Law: If you sell goods that are not known to infringe the exclusive rights of a registered trademark, you will not be liable for compensation if you can prove that you legally obtained the goods and indicate the supplier. Therefore, this form of trademark infringement requires subjective knowledge by the seller. 4. The act of counterfeiting or making without authorization the registered trademark signs of others or selling the counterfeit or unauthorized made registered trademark signs. It should be noted that this infringement is a trademark infringement, including "manufacturing" and "sales". 5. Acts that cause other damage to the exclusive right to use registered trademarks of others. Legal basis: Article 57 of the Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China: Anyone who commits any of the following acts shall infringe upon the exclusive right to use a registered trademark: (1) Using the same product on the same product without the permission of the trademark registrant Using a trademark that is the same as its registered trademark; (2) Using a trademark that is similar to its registered trademark on the same product without the permission of the trademark registrant, or using a trademark that is the same or similar to its registered trademark on similar products, which may easily lead to Confusing; (3) Selling goods that infringe the exclusive rights of registered trademarks; (4) Forging or manufacturing registered trademarks of others without authorization or selling forged or unauthorized registered trademarks; (5) Replacing trademarks without the consent of the trademark registrant Registers a trademark and puts the goods with the replaced trademark into the market; (6) Deliberately provides facilities for infringing the exclusive rights of others' trademarks and helps others to infringe the exclusive rights of trademarks; (7) Giving others the exclusive right to register a trademark causing other damage. Although trademarks and products are in two different scopes, generally speaking, the infringement of trademarks is smaller than that of products, because trademarks have a roughly related classification, but the subjective situation of product infringement is very clear. If there is no If you patent your related content at the beginning, it will usually be infringed upon.