1. Scope of Application
This Infringement Policy applies to the SHOEACC foreign trade independent website (hereinafter referred to as the “Site”). The Site primarily engages in the sale of footwear and related accessories, particularly products involving collaborations with cartoon/animation intellectual property (IP), illustrators, or newly developed design patents.
2. Types of Infringement
(1) Trademark Infringement
Unauthorized use or imitation of registered trademarks, logos, service marks, brand names, or other commercial identifiers on footwear accessories sold on the Site, which may cause consumer confusion regarding product origin, sponsorship, or affiliation.
(2) Copyright Infringement
Unauthorized use of copyrighted original works (e.g., cartoon character designs, animation plots, illustrations) on footwear accessories, including but not limited to reproduction, modification, distribution, display, or creation of derivative works without permission.
(3) Patent/Design Infringement
- Traditional Patent Infringement Manufacturing, using, selling, or importing footwear accessories that infringe valid patents without the patent holder’s authorization.
- New Design Patent Infringement Producing products whose overall or partial appearance (e.g., shape, pattern, color combinations) resembles a registered new design patent, causing consumer confusion or misidentification.
(4) Trade Secret Infringement
Acquiring, using, or disclosing third-party trade secrets through improper means, including creative concepts, production processes, marketing strategies, customer lists, or other confidential information related to IP collaborations.
3. Compliance Measures
(1) Supplier Due Diligence
Before partnering with suppliers, the Site conducts comprehensive due diligence, requiring suppliers to provide documentation proving their products and designs do not infringe any intellectual property rights. For IP-related collaborations (e.g., cartoon/animation IP or illustrators), suppliers must disclose the legal source and authorization status of the IP/works. Suppliers must also provide written declarations confirming no infringement of new design patents.
(2) Original Design and Authorization Verification
- In-House Designs
- Retain complete design records (e.g., sketches, discussion logs, creation dates) to prove originality.
- File patent applications promptly for products involving new design patents.
- Collaboration Authorization
- Collaborators (e.g., IP holders or illustrators) must provide valid authorization documents specifying scope, duration, usage rights, and obligations.
- Copyright agreements must clarify ownership, usage limits, and rights to derivative works.
- For new design patents, define ownership and usage rights in writing.
- No collaboration-based products will be launched without explicit authorization.
(3) Regular Audits and Training
- Audits
- Conduct periodic reviews of products to identify potential IP risks, focusing on compliance with collaboration terms and design patents.
- Suspend and investigate products with suspected infringement risks.
- Training
- Train employees on IP laws (trademarks, copyrights, patents) and risk identification.
- Emphasize new design patent procedures, infringement criteria, and best practices for resolving disputes.