CIPC Online Services - I'm stuck :O

Alton Turner Blackwood

Honorary Master
Joined
Apr 30, 2010
Messages
27,483
If you dont come right, and willing to sacrifice the money you transferred, I can do the registration for you, and you can just pay me the CIPC fees.
I implicitly suggested that (I have R125 in my account), but he ignored me. Oh well :whistling:
 

iFan

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2013
Messages
396
I implicitly suggested that (I have R125 in my account), but he ignored me. Oh well :whistling:

Sorry I obviously missed something here! :) @YingYang

How is someone else allowed to register your company on their account?

Thanks
 

S-B-S

Member
Joined
May 4, 2015
Messages
13
Sorry I obviously missed something here! :) @YingYang

How is someone else allowed to register your company on their account?

Thanks

CIPC allows someone who has an account, to register a company, even if the account holder is not a director.
 
Last edited:

Craig_

Honorary Master
Joined
Feb 22, 2016
Messages
26,906
[XC] Oj101;16046698 said:
FNB will do the registration process for you for free if you open a business account with them, you'll only have to pay the R 125 without a name or R 175 with (same as doing it yourself).

HI, do you perhaps know if it still works like this, and current costs?
 

Trademark24

New Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2017
Messages
1
Why DIY trademarking fails - blame the 'own search' at CIPC

Economic times are tough and the DIY culture is thriving…which is great for the entrepreneurial ethos, but potentially not so good for the successful protection of your trademark.

Take the case of the following DIY trademarkers:

In 2016 Mr A starts manufacturing clothing and wants to protect his trademark BLACK PEARL. He conducts his own trademark search on CIPC’s website, finds no conflicting mark and files his trademark application. He invests money in packaging, printing and advertising and believes all is well.

Not so fast, Mr A. You overlooked Mr B’s application BLAQUE PEARL, also for the manufacturing of clothing but he filed a trademark application in 2015. With trademarks, it is usually ‘first come first served’ and Mr B’s trademark BLAQUE PEARL will block Mr A’s BLACK PEARL because they are phonetically exact.

Mr B is happy. Again, not so fast, Mr B. Enters Mr C, who applied for the trademark AFRO PEARL in 2009. He is opposing Mr B’s BLACK PEARL, because it is conceptually similar and there may be grounds for confusion.

Mr C is also happy…until he finds out his AFRO PEARL trademark application has never moved to final registration because CIPC accepted it conditionally and Mr C either never complied with the official actions sent to him or never received them.

The outcome? Mr C’s trademark application is dead in the water, Mr A’s trademark application will be refused and Mr B is the clear winner – if he complies with the official actions within the three month period allowed (and there will be official actions) or there are no further objections or oppositions.

This whole scenario could have been prevented if the applicants invested in a comprehensive search and had an expert trademark service provider to alert them to possible objections or oppositions.

Is it worth saving some money initially but losing your valuable brand by doing it yourself?

(All the trademark applications mentioned are on the official Trademark Register and are open to public inspection. They were used as a random example and no negative intent should be inferred.)
 
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