That supposedly ill-gotten education at the University of Southern California isn’t the only problem for Lori Loughlin’s daughter these days.

Olivia Jade Giannulli, a product influencer and brander with millions of followers combined on Instagram and YouTube, tried to trademark the brands “Olivia Jade Beauty” and “Olivia Jade,” but was rejected in part because of improper punctuation on her application.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued a notice earlier this month that the 19-year-old has to “correct the punctuation in the identification to clarify the individual items in the list of goods.”

“Proper punctuation in identifications is necessary to delineate explicitly each product or service within a list and to avoid ambiguity,” officials wrote in the March 15 letter. “Commas, semicolons, and apostrophes are the only punctuation that should be used.”

The letter specified that the applicant should not use colons, exclamation marks, question marks or periods in those descriptions.

Giannulli has six months to respond or several of the cosmetics she listed will be omitted from consideration, officials wrote.

Giannulli’s parents, “Full House” star Loughlin and designer Mossimo Giannulli, were arrested earlier this month for allegedly paying $500,000 so both Olivia Jade and her sister, Isabella Rose, could get into USC under the ruse of being crew athletes even though neither participated in the sport.