Refusal to protect a
trademark on the grounds that the applied-for mark is identical or confusingly
similar to a prior registered mark (cited mark). To overcome the refusal, the
applicant usually provides a letter of Consent from the cited trademark owner,
which contains the following contents: (i) to authorize the applicant to use
and use and register the applied-for mark and (ii) to commit no disputes
arising.
In the past, letters of
consent are frequently entitled to great weight in its likelihood of confusion
analysis in Vietnam. If an applied-for mark is not identical to a cited mark,
most of cases will be successful. However, the registry changed their practice
in the beginning of 2020 and a letter of consent no longer holds great weight.
Different assigned examiners may have different opinions on the same similarity
test supported by a letter of consent an assigned examiner may not solicit a letter
of consent.
The Vietnam intellectual
property law does not provide any provisions in relation to letters of consent.
In fact, in many cases letters of consent are accepted as a basis for
overcoming the refusal. However, letters of consent are still controversy.
In order to perfect the legal
provisions regarding letters of consent in establishing trademark rights in
Vietnam, the Intellectual Property Office is conducting polls on this topic in
each the local IP agent.
INVENCO will deliver any
trends in changing the practice to the clients once it is available.