Manila Bulletin

Michael Jordan loses China trademark suit

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BEIJING (AFP) — A Beijing court has dismissed a trademark case brought by US basketball superstar Michael Jordan against a company using a similar name and logo to his Nike-produced brand, a report said.

The former Chicago Bull is arguably the most popular internatio­nal basketball star in China and is known in the country as ‘’Qiaodan’’, a Chinese version of his name.

He asked Chinese authoritie­s in 2012 to revoke the trademark of Qiaodan Sports Co, accusing the sportswear firm of misleading consumers about its ties to the six-time NBA champion.

As well as the name, Qiaodan’s products carry a silhouette of a leaping basketball player resembling the ‘’Jumpman’’ logo used by US sporting goods giant Nike to promote its Air Jordan brand.

Authoritie­s refused Jordan’s request, and a lower court in Beijing did the same. He appealed to the Beijing Higher People’s Court, which has ruled against him, the Chinese news portal Sohu reported.

‘’’Jordan’ is not the only possible reference for ‘Qiaodan’ in the trademark under dispute,’’ it cited a transcript of the verdict as saying.

‘’In addition, ‘Jordan’ is a common surname used by Americans,’’ the court added according to the report Monday, and the logo was in the shape of a person with no facial features, so that it was ‘’hard’’ for consumers to identify it as Jordan.

There was insufficie­nt evidence to prove the trademark referred to the US star, it concluded. Jordan retired from the sport in 2003. China has long been seen as a counterfei­ters’ haven and has constantly been criticized by its trade partners over lax protection of intellectu­al property rights.

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