1. Any
sign, or any
combination of
signs, capable of distinguishing the
goods or
services of one
undertaking from those of other
undertakings, shall be capable of constituting a
trademark. Such
signs, in particular words
including personal names,
letters,
numerals, figurative elements and
combinations of
colours as well as
any
combination of such
signs, shall be
eligible for
registration as
trademarks. Where
signs are not inherently capable of distinguishing
the
relevant goods or
services,
Members may make registrability
depend on distinctiveness acquired through use.
Members may require,
as a
condition of
registration, that
signs be visually perceptible.
2. Paragraph
1 shall not be understood to
prevent a
Member from denying
registration of a trademark on other grounds, provided that they do
not derogate from the
provisions of the
Paris Convention (1967).
3.
Members
may make registrability depend on use. However, actual use of a
trademark shall not be a
condition for filing an
application for
registration. An
application shall not be refused solely on the
ground that intended use has not taken
place before the
expiry of a
period of three
years from the
date of
application.
4. The
nature of the
goods or
services to which a
trademark is to be applied
shall in no
case form an obstacle to
registration of the
trademark.