Trademark Rush Follows India's 'Operation Sindoor' Military Strike

Within hours of India's precision strike in Pakistan dubbed 'Operation Sindoor,' several entities, including Reliance Industries, filed for trademark rights on the phrase. The move taps into its cultural symbolism and potential in media and entertainment. However, trademark claims face challenges without government backing for military operation names.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 08-05-2025 14:26 IST | Created: 08-05-2025 14:26 IST
Trademark Rush Follows India's 'Operation Sindoor' Military Strike
Representative Image. Image Credit: ANI
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India's recent military strike, named 'Operation Sindoor,' targeting terrorist sites in Pakistan, has prompted an unusual trademark scramble. Reliance Industries was among several entities to swiftly file applications for trademark rights within hours of the operation, intrigued by the phrase's cultural resonance and potential for media ventures.

According to the commerce and industry ministry's intellectual property application website, four parties filed for the 'Operation Sindoor' trademark within an eight-hour span on May 7, 2025. These include Reliance Industries, a retired Air Force officer, a resident of Mumbai, and a Delhi-based lawyer. The applications fall under Class 41 of the Nice Classification, covering media, entertainment, and cultural services.

Despite the trademark frenzy, there's a significant legal hurdle: Indian military operation names aren't automatically protected by intellectual property laws. The Ministry of Defense rarely registers such names, leaving them open to private trademark claims. However, the registrar may reject applications if deemed misleading or against public policy, casting uncertainty on initial filers like Reliance Industries. (ANI)

(With inputs from agencies.)

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