Trademark filing in China via the Madrid Protocol - what’s luck got to do with it?
China is special when it comes to filing trademark applications because of its goods and services classification system. China uses the Nice classification system of 45 classes like much of the world, but China also has the overlay of its subclassification system.
Don’t sweat the Madrid Protocol Central Attack
It’s long been thought that one weakness of this centralised system is “Central Attack”. This is where the home registration is attacked (within five years of the international application date), the whole house of cards, which is built upon that home registration, may come tumbling down.
To Madrid or not Madrid #2: What about the Goods and Services?
Goods and services specifications are key when you’re deciding if Madrid is the right option for your client’s trademark filing. As we mentioned in our last post, filing through Madrid should not be an automatic decision, and the specific mark is an important consideration.
The Madrid Protocol: To Madrid or not Madrid? Why the mark itself matters
At Sortify.tm we think about the ins and outs of filing trademark applications around the world every day (after which we typically enjoy an in-house brewed craft beer)! If there’s one rule of thumb we have for filing internationally via the Madrid Protocol – it is that there is no rule of thumb. We don’t always recommend using Madrid and we don’t always recommend NOT using Madrid.