Registered trademark symbol explained

Mark:®
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The registered trademark symbol, , is a typographic symbol that provides notice that the preceding word or symbol is a trademark or service mark that has been registered with a national trademark office. A trademark is a symbol, word, or words legally registered or established by use as representing a company, product or service.[1] [2]

Unregistered trademarks can instead be marked with the trademark symbol,, while unregistered service marks are marked with the service mark symbol, . The proper manner to display these symbols is immediately following the mark; the symbol is commonly in superscript style, but that is not legally required. In many jurisdictions, only registered trademarks confer easily defended legal rights.[3]

In the US, the registered trademark symbol was originally introduced in the Trademark Act of 1946.

Because the symbol is not commonly available on typewriters (or ASCII), it was common to approximate it with the characters (or ). An example of a legal equivalent is the phrase Registered, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which may be abbreviated to Reg U.S. Pat & TM Off.[4] in the US.

Computer usage

The registered trademark character was added to several extended ASCII character sets, including ISO-8859-1 from which it was inherited by Unicode as .[5]

Related and similar symbols

Notes and References

  1. For example, Web site: Intellectual property office . . 5 June 2020.
  2. Web site: 15 U.S.C. 1111. 15 December 2005.
  3. For example Web site: Unregistered Trade Marks . . 5 June 2020.
  4. Gregory H. Guillot. A Guide to Proper Trademark Use. 1995–2007. http://www.ggmark.com/guide.html
  5. Web site: C1 Controls and Latin-1 Supplement Range: 0080–00FF . . 2016.