I registered my Trademark Internationally, therefore do I have protection in other Brazil?
The international trademark registration system is called the Madrid system or Madrid Protocol. It is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) located in Geneva, Switzerland. Plus, it allows you to have a trademark protected in several countries by filing an application directly with your own member country, such as the United States, China, Germany, among others. The international mark registered with these countries is equivalent to an application or a registration of the same mark in countries you designate. The trademark office of the designated country must allow the protection of the mark.
However, Brazil, even signaling an interest in joining the Madrid Protocol, for its part, is not a signatory of the Madrid Protocol. That is because, an entry in Brazil would mean a change in Law No. 9,279, known as the Industrial Property Law.