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IP Infringement in Australia: Trademark and Copyright Guide

ROY AI·2026.07.04·5분 읽기
#Business Law#AU#IP

이 글은 일반적인 법률 정보 제공을 목적으로 작성되었습니다. 개별 사건에 대한 법률 조언이 아니며, 구체적인 법적 사안은 자격을 갖춘 법률 전문가와 상담하시기 바랍니다.

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Learn how to identify, document, and respond to IP infringement in Australia, covering trademarks, copyright, and enforcement steps.

Intellectual property (IP) infringement occurs when someone uses your trademark, copyright, or other protected IP without authorisation. It affects businesses of all sizes — from sole traders to large corporations — and can cause serious financial and reputational harm. This guide explains the key legal issues, the evidence you need, and the steps to take if your IP rights are being violated in Australia.

Trademark infringement occurs when a person or business uses a sign substantially identical or deceptively similar to your registered trademark in relation to similar goods or services. Under the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth), registered trademark owners have exclusive rights to use that mark commercially. Unregistered marks may still attract protection under Australian Consumer Law if passing off or misleading conduct can be established.

Copyright infringement arises when someone reproduces, distributes, or communicates a copyright-protected work — such as text, images, software, or music — without the owner's permission. The Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) protects original works automatically upon creation; no registration is required. Infringement can be direct (copying the work) or indirect (authorising others to copy).

Remedies available include injunctions to stop ongoing infringement, damages or an account of profits, and delivery up or destruction of infringing goods. Courts can also award additional damages for flagrant infringement. Acting promptly matters — delay can affect the remedies a court is willing to grant.

§2What Evidence and Documents You Need

  • Proof of your IP ownership (trademark registration certificate, creation records, or copyright chain of title)
  • Screenshots or recordings of the infringing material with visible URLs and dates
  • Copies of the infringing product, packaging, or promotional materials
  • Dates when the infringement was first discovered
  • Evidence of your own prior use of the trademark or copyright work
  • Sales and revenue records showing financial impact
  • Any cease-and-desist correspondence already sent or received
  • Social media posts, advertisements, or listings showing infringing use
  • Witness statements from employees or customers who encountered the infringement
  • Expert reports on market confusion (particularly useful for trademark matters)
  • Licensing agreements or contracts that define permitted uses
  • IP Australia trademark registration records (publicly searchable)
  • Web archive captures (e.g. Wayback Machine) preserving infringing pages

§3Step-by-Step Process

No. Copyright protection is automatic under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) once an original work is created and expressed in material form. However, keeping clear records of creation dates and authorship is essential if you ever need to prove ownership.

A trademark protects brand identifiers — names, logos, and slogans — used to distinguish goods or services. Copyright protects original creative works such as writing, artwork, music, and software. Both can be infringed simultaneously if, for example, a logo is copied.

For copyright and trademark infringement under federal law, the standard limitation period is generally six years from the date the infringement occurred or was discoverable. Seeking advice promptly ensures you preserve all available options.

§7Can I enforce my IP rights without going to court?

Yes. Many IP disputes are resolved through cease-and-desist letters, negotiated settlements, or alternative dispute resolution such as mediation. Court proceedings are typically a last resort when other methods fail.

§8What if the infringer is based overseas?

Cross-border infringement is complex. Australian courts can sometimes assert jurisdiction, and international treaties such as the Paris Convention and TRIPS Agreement provide frameworks for cooperation. An IP lawyer can advise on the most practical enforcement strategy.

Use ROY's free AI analysis to understand how the law applies to your specific situation.

This article provides general legal information only and does not constitute legal advice for your specific situation. Laws vary by state/territory. Consult a qualified lawyer for advice tailored to your circumstances.

FAQ

자주 묻는 질문

Q. Step 1: Confirm Your IP Rights and the Infringement+

Verify your trademark is registered and current via IP Australia, or confirm your copyright ownership through creation and publication records. Compare the infringing material against your protected IP to assess whether it is substantially identical or deceptively similar.

Q. Step 2: Gather and Preserve Evidence+

Document the infringement immediately. Take timestamped screenshots, purchase infringing products if possible, and save all online content. Evidence can disappear quickly, so act fast.

Q. Step 3: Send a Cease-and-Desist Letter+

A formal cease-and-desist letter notifies the infringer of your rights and demands they stop. This is often the first step before litigation and can resolve matters without court involvement. A lawyer can draft this to strengthen its legal weight.

Q. Step 4: Consider Formal Dispute Resolution+

If the infringer does not respond or comply, options include mediation, filing a complaint with IP Australia (for trademark disputes), or commencing proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia or Federal Circuit and Family Court. Limitation periods apply — generally six years under relevant federal law.

Q. Step 5: Seek Legal Advice and Enforce Your Rights+

Engage an IP lawyer to advise on the strength of your claim and appropriate enforcement strategy. Courts can grant urgent injunctions where ongoing harm is demonstrated.

Q. FAQ+
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법적 고지 (Legal Notice)

이 문서는 일반적인 법률 정보 제공 목적으로 작성되었으며, 개별 사건에 대한 법률 자문, 법적 조언, 또는 결과 보장이 아닙니다. 구체적인 법적 사안에 대해서는 반드시 자격을 갖춘 법률 전문가와 상담하시기 바랍니다. ROY Legal Insights는 정보 제공 서비스이며, 법무법인이 아닙니다. 최초 발행일: 2026.07.04.