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  • Trademark Law

    Who Owns Your Identity? Personality Rights in Indian Law

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal February 6, 2026February 6, 2026

    PERSONALITY RIGHTS, IP AND THE INDIAN CONSTITUTION Intellectual property does not merely protect the intangible creations of the mind. It also safeguards your being — your identity, dignity, and commercial persona. India does not have a separate statute on personality rights. Instead, these rights flow from constitutional guarantees. Control over one’s identity, as an aspect of personal liberty, is protected under Article 21, while the expression and commercial use of one’s personality find indirect…

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  • Trademark Law

    Distinctiveness, Novelty, and Originality: Why IP Thresholds Look Similar but MustStay Apart

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal February 3, 2026February 3, 2026

    Trademark’s non distinctiveness; patent’s novelty; copyright’s originality— do they intersect or are they clearly defined? Different statutory regimes in Intellectual property law impose familiar looking filters: Distinctiveness in trademark law, Novelty in patent law, and Originality in copyright law. While these standards appear to perform similar gatekeeping functions, each threshold is designed to answer a different normative question. These thresholds should not be treated as interchangeable, and here’s why —Originality is not novelty.Distinctiveness is…

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  • Trademark Law

    How Trademark Replies Are Structured: A Conceptual Overview

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 29, 2026January 29, 2026

    Trademark replies are often perceived as technical documents focused solely on compliance. In reality, a trademark reply is a legal narrative — one that explains why a mark deserves protection within the framework of trademark law. A reply does not begin with denial.It begins with understanding. The structure of a trademark reply reflects how the law expects objections to be addressed: through reasoned explanation, legal grounding, and contextual clarity. At a conceptual level, a…

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  • Trademark Law

    What Is a Trademark Examination Report? Understanding Its Purpose

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 29, 2026January 29, 2026

    A trademark examination report is often viewed as a hurdle in the registration process. In practice, it serves a far more important function. It is the document through which the law explains how it has assessed a proposed mark. At the examination stage, the trademark authority evaluates whether a mark meets statutory requirements. The examination report records this evaluation. It identifies potential legal concerns and links them to specific provisions of the Trade Marks…

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  • Trademark Law

    Why Trademark Objections Are Not Rejections

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 28, 2026January 28, 2026

    For many applicants, receiving a trademark examination report feels like a setback. The word objection often creates the impression that registration has already been denied. In reality, a trademark objection is not a rejection — it is an invitation to respond. Trademark examination is not adversarial in nature.The examiner’s role is to assess whether a proposed mark meets legal standards laid down in the Trade Marks Act. When concerns arise, they are formally communicated…

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  • Trademark Law

    What Makes a Trademark Distinctive? Understanding the Core Idea

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 28, 2026January 28, 2026

    Not every word, name, or symbol can function as a trademark.Trademark law does not protect signs simply because someone wishes to claim them. It protects signs that are capable of distinguishing one source from another. This requirement is known as distinctiveness, and it lies at the heart of trademark law. A distinctive trademark allows consumers to make a mental connection. When people encounter the mark again, they are able to associate it with a…

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  • Trademark Law

    Why Trademark Law Exists: Beyond Logos and Brand Names

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 28, 2026January 28, 2026

    When people hear the term trademark, the first image that comes to mind is usually a logo — a symbol printed on products or displayed on websites.But trademark law is not about logos alone. It is about identity, trust, and market order. At its core, trademark law exists to answer a simple question:How does the law help consumers know who they are dealing with? Every time a consumer chooses a product or service, they…

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  • Legal Explainers

    From Dominion to Republic: How India Made Independence Irreversible

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 28, 2026January 28, 2026

    Q. When was the Constitution adopted and when did it come into force? A. Adopted: 26 November 1949Commenced: 26 January 1950 (Republic Day) Q. Why didn’t the Constitution come into force immediately after adoption? A. India required a transition from a colonial legal system to a republican constitutional order and chose 26 January to symbolise Purna Swaraj (1930). Q. What governed India between 26 Nov 1949 and 26 Jan 1950? Was India without a…

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  • Legal Explainers

    The Trademark law and the Indian constitution

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 28, 2026January 28, 2026

    Reading Trademark Law as Constitutional LawWhen one begins studying trademark law, the first document usually opened is the Trade Marks Act, 1999. Sections. Definitions. Procedures. But Trademark law in India does not actually begin with a statute. It begins with the Constitution.Before any trademark right is granted, the Constitution decides who has the authority to create that right. Under Article 246 read with the Union List, trademarks fall squarely within Parliament’s domain. This placement…

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  • RERA Law

    RERA Explained: Foundations of India’s Real Estate Regulation

    ByAdvocate Nandini Jaiswal January 17, 2026January 17, 2026

    Understanding the law before you enter the deal What is RERA?The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 (RERA) is a central legislation enacted to regulate the real estate sector in India. Its primary objective is to bring transparency, accountability, and consumer protection to a sector that was largely unregulated and fragmented. RERA establishes Real Estate Regulatory Authorities in each State and Union Territory to: This institutional framework is provided under Sections 20 to…

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