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72 views

mkt

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mina1234tw
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Intellectual Property Quiz

Note: Student marks red cover for the correct answer. Save the file under student code and name
and submit to Edunext
Length of time: 60 minutes

Student code: HS190670


Student full name: Đỗ Linh Chi

1. What protects the intellectual property created by artists?


A, Copyright
B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trademarks

2. What protects the intellectual property created by


designers? A, Copyright
B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trademarks

3. What protects the intellectual property created by


inventors? A, Copyright
B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trademarks

4. What does a trademark protect?


A, An invention
B, A work of art
C, Logos, names and brands
D, The look, shape and feel of a product
E, A secret formula

5. In most countries, how long does copyright last for?


A, 10 years after the creation of the work
B, 50 years after the creation of the work
C, 10 years after the death of the person who created that work
D, 50 years after the death of the person who created that work

6. If you write an original story, what type of intellectual property gives you the right to
decide who can make and sell copies of your work?
A, Copyright

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B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trademarks

7. Imagine a sports team sets up a company to sell its own range of clothes. What type
of intellectual property can the team use to show that the clothes are made by them?
A, Copyright
B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trademarks

8. If a company develops a new technology that improves its main product, what type
of intellectual property can they use to stop others from copying their invention?
A, Copyright
B, Geographical indications
C, Patents
D, Registered designs
E, Trade marks

9. Which of following would not gain copyright protection?


a) A DVD
b) An unrecorded speech
c) Written lyrics of a song
d) A hand knitted jumper

10. What is the duration of copyright protection for a novel?


a) A novel will not gain copyright protection.
b) The day the author dies
c) The end of the calendar year in which the author died.
d) Minimum 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the author died.

11, Which one of the following actions is not a breach of copyright?


a) To import copied CDs.
b) To make a copy of a CD and sell it.
c) To borrow a CD from a friend and copy it to your laptop for your own private use.
d) To purchase a CD and copy it to your laptop for your own private use.

11. Which of the following is not one of the three essential elements for a patent to be granted
for an invention?
a) Be a product.
b) Be new to the public.
c) Involve an inventive step.
d) Be capable of industrial application.

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12. Which one of the following statements is true?
a) A patent must be registered in order to gain protection.
b) Copyright must be registered in order to gain protection.
c) The owner of a patent cannot sell it but can prevent others using his invention.

13. Which one of the following could not be registered as a trade mark?
a) The mark is an image.
b) The mark is made up of letters and numbers.
c) The mark is made up of a symbol with no words or letters.
d) The mark represents the natural or technical shape of the goods.

14. Which one of the following statements is false?


a) The maximum duration for an unregistered design right is 15 years.
b) A registered design right may cover 2 dimensional and 3 dimensional objects.
c) A registered design right only applies to 3 dimensional objects.
d) The maximum duration for a registered design right is 25 years.

15. Unless a contract provides otherwise, who is the first owner of a design right created
a) The person who commissioned the design.
b) The manufacturer of the design.
c) The government.
d) The designer.

16. Choose all that may qualify as Fair Use for student classroom and personal use:
A. Copy limited portions of materials to support research and learning.
B. Copy one factual journal article for your notes to help prepare your research paper.
C. Copy a small portion of a subject related song to use in your audio/visual history presentation.
D. Copy all the drawings of Snow White, elves, and goblins found in a Grimm’s Fairy
Tales book from 1917.

17. What is patentable?


A, Discoveries
B, a technical solution to a concrete technical problem.
C, a methodology
D, an algorithm

18. What are the 3 patentability


requirements? A, Novelty, discovery, useful
B, Novelty, Non-obvious, useful
C, Useful, commercially successful, novelty

19. Copyrights protect


A, Scientific publications (articles, chapters, sections, acts seminars, thesis, manuals, books
including images)
B, Scientific publications, only if they’re published on an institutional repository
C, Scientific publications, only if they’re published by a publisher

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20. Software’s are protected by
patents A, True
B, False

21. Several products (luxury cars, spéculoos, et paper towel) are sold with the trademark « Lotus
» because these products are owned by the same company
A, True
B, False

22. What does a trademark


protect? A, an invention
B, a work of art
C, logos, names and brands
D, a secret formula

23. You just developed a great process to create better workflow on your production line, but
don't want your competitors to find out about it. What type of intellectual property right
protection do you have?
A, Patent
B, Trade secret
C, Copyright
D, Trademark

24. Alex invents a small water faucet that dispenses boiling water. He applies for and obtains a
patent. Andrew then uses Alex's design without Alex's permission to manufacture and distribute
the faucet. This is an example of .

A, infraction
B, imposition
C, infringement
D, intrusion
E, interference

25. Which of the following is NOT protected by intellectual property laws?


a. A land deed
b. A patent
c. A trademark
d. A copyright
e. A trade secret

26. Carrie opens a small coffee shop in a small Colorado town and names it 'Grounds'. Charlie
owns a large commercial landscaping business in Los Angeles also named 'Grounds'.
Charlie's company has been around for six years, while Carrie's business is brand new. Both
companies claim a trademark to this name, but neither has registered the name. When
Googling his

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company, Charlie discovers Carrie's small business and sues her for trademark infringement.
What is the likely result?
a. Charlie will win his suit against Carrie because she used his company name
without asking him.
b. Carrie will win this suit because Charlie never registered the name.
c. Charlie will win his suit against Carrie because his company has been around
much longer, and is much bigger.
d. Carrie will win this suit because Charlie can't prove that he owns a legal and
protected mark.
e. Carrie will win this suit because there is no likelihood of confusion.

27. Soda-Pop asks Lady GiGi if they can use her song in a television commercial and she
agrees. Soda Pop will pay Lady GiGi. This is called:
a. Fair use
b. Licensing
c. Public domain
d. Registered copyright
e. Unregistered copyright

28. Anne's grandfather wrote a very famous novel many years ago and she owned the
copyrights. She recently discovered that the copyrights expired and people can use the novel as
they wish. This is called:
A, Fair use
B, Licensing
C, Public domain
D, Registered copyright
E, Unregistered copyright

29. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) protect the use of information and ideas that are of
a. Ethical value
b. Moral value
c. Social value
d. Commercial value

30. The term ‘Intellectual Property Rights’ covers


a. Copyrights
b. Know-how
c. Trade dress
d. All of the above

31. Trade mark


a. is represented graphically
b. is capable of distinguishing the goods or services of one person from those of others
c. may include shapes of goods or combination of colors
d. All of the above

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32. Symbol of Lotus of VietnamAirlines is
a. Copyright
b. Patent
c. Trademark
d. All of the above

33. In ‘quid-pro-quo’, quo stands for


a. knowledge disclosed to the public
b. monopoly granted for the term of the patent
c. exclusive privilege of making, selling and using the invention
d. None of the above

34. Which of the following best describes a trade secret?


A. Information that many people do not know about how a product like a smartphone
is made.
B. Virtually any information that is of value as a result of not being generally known.
C. Any information relating to the finances of a publicly held company.

35. What are the two main requirements for information to be protectable as a trade secret?
A. It must be novel and non-obvious.
B. It must be original and expressed in a tangible form that can be seen or copied.
C. It must be not generally known by others, and it must have been subject to
reasonable efforts to avoid public disclosure.

36. What is one key advantage of trade secret protection versus patent protection?
A. It protects the information to be kept secret indefinitely.
B. It prevents others from ever independently deriving the same information.
C. Both of the above are correct.

37. Which of the following is an acceptable reason for refusal to register a trademark?
a. The trademark is contrary to accepted standards of morality
b. The trademark contains an object or animal that is present in another registered trademark
c. The trademark contains a word that is in common usage
d. The trademark contains the colors of a sovereign country’s flag

38. Any idea or artistic creation that is recorded in some form, whether it’s hard copy
or digital.
a) Creative Work
b) Copyright
c) Creative Commons
d) License

39. A law that protects your control over the creative work you make so that people must
get your permission before they copy, share, or perform your work.
a. Creative Work
b. Copyright

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c. Creative Common
d. License

40. When applying for a patent which of the following is not one of the three requirements
of novelty?
a. The invention must be new
b. The invention must represent a clear departure from existing knowledge
c. The invention must have capability for industrial application
d. The invention must have an application not currently fulfilled by an existing invention

41. It means the name or designation identifying or distinguishing an enterprise.


a. Copyright
b. Trademarks
c. Tradename
d. Patent

42. Any distinctive word, name, symbol, emblem, sign, or device, or any combination thereof,
adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant on his goods to identify and distinguish them
from those manufactured, sold, or dealt by others.
a. Copyright
b. Tradename
c. Trademark
d. Patent
e. Domain

43. Any distinctive word, name, symbol, emblem, sign, or device, or any combination thereof,
adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant on his goods to identify and distinguish them
from those manufactured, sold, or dealt by others.
a. Copyright
b. Tradename
c. Trademark
d. Patent

44. It is confined to literary and artistic works which are original intellectual creations in
the literary and artistic domain protected from the moment of their creation.
a. Patent
b. Tradename
c. Trademarks
d. Copyright

45. This term has been defined as such a close or ingenious imitation as to be calculated to
deceive ordinary purchasers, or such resemblance of the infringing mark to the original as to
deceive an ordinary purchase giving such attention as a purchaser usually gives, and to cause
him to purchase the one supposing it to be the other.
a. Doctrine of secondary meaning
b. Colorable imitation

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c. Trademark infringement
d. Cancellation of trademark

46. It is any visible sign capable of distinguishing the goods (trademark) or services
(service mark) of an enterprise and shall include a stamped or marked container of goods.
a. Copyright
b. Trademarks
c. Patent
d. Tradename

47. The term “WIPO” stands for….


A) World Investment policy organization
B) World intellectual property organization
C) Wildlife Investigation and Policing organization
D) World institute for Prevention of organized crime

48. A new way to process milk so that there is no fat in any cheese made from it. then what's
the area of the IP law:
A) Patent
B) Trademark
C) Copyrights
D) GI

49. A singer wishes to assign the rights to reproduce a video she has made of her concert,
then what's the area of the IP law:
A) Copyrights
B) Trademark
C) Patent
D) Geographical indications

50. The rights provided by copyrights are:


A) Reproduction of the work in various forms
B) Public performance and translate into other languages
C) Broadcasting by radio or cable
D) All of these

---End of paper----

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