How to Determine the Recognition Level of Products in Unfair Competition Disputes in China, I
Comments on the unfair competition case between Ferrero and Jinsha
Today and tomorrow, we will analyze several issues raised by the Ferrero and Jinsha unfair competition
case. Namely: the scope of name recognition, whether a product’s packaging can refer to the products of others, and protection over product packaging through trademark protection. Today, we will briefly introduce the case facts and the opinions held by the deciding courts.
Case summary:
Ferrero Company registered the trademark “FERRERO ROCHER” in China in 1986 and its FERRERO ROCHER chocolate (“Ferrero Chocolate”) entered the Chinese market in 1988. The Ferrero Chocolate packaging has the following features: 1) gold, ball-shaped foil wrapping; 2) the “FERRERO ROCHER” trademark printed as a decoration within an oval on the gold foil; 3) each chocolate wrapped in gold foil is padded with additional brown paper; 4) outer packaging is made of transparent plastic, so that the inner gold-wrapped balls can be seen from the outside; and 5) a red ribbon-like decoration printed on the trademark of the chocolate.




