Deck 15: Law of Intellectual Property Rights Licensing

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Question
Some developing countries bar the use of foreign brands or trademarks.
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Question
In the U.S., trade secrets are protected under federal statutory law.
Question
The European Union has the most restrictive intellectual property law in the world.
Question
Trademark law protects works of original authorship.
Question
Copyright protection does not begin until a copyright notice is placed on the work and registered with the Copyright Office.
Question
As long as a trademark does not become generic, it may be perpetually renewed.
Question
Trade secrets may be protected perpetually in all circumstances.
Question
The Economic Espionage Act designates confidential customer lists as protected trade secrets.
Question
Most countries in the world award patents on a first to invent basis.
Question
A trademark registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office remains in force for 10 years from the date of registration.
Question
As a general rule, a copyright endures for the life of the work's author plus an additional 70 years after his/her death.
Question
To prove trademark infringement under American law a party must prove that another's use of the registered mark is likely to cause consumer confusion.
Question
Under the Trademark Act, it is required that a mark be registered in order to be able to bring a false designation of origin claim.
Question
Blurring is a type of trademark dilution in which the trademark is linked to products of shoddy quality.
Question
The fair use doctrine allows others to use small portions of a copyright work in the creation of another work.
Question
Materials in the public domain are not afforded copyright protection.
Question
The importation of gray market goods is closely monitored by the Customs Service.
Question
Once a trademark owner sells his product, the buyer ordinarily may resell the product under the original mark without incurring any trademark law liability.
Question
Bootlegging is an unauthorized duplication of a performance already reduced to a sound recording and commercially released.
Question
The Berne Convention firmly established what types of literary and artistic works are to be protected by signatory countries.
Question
The Rome Act of 1928 recognized the moral rights of authors to object to any distortion or other modification of the work.
Question
The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) is enforced under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).
Question
TRIPS recognizes a country's right to limit the granting of intellectual property rights when they violate antitrust laws
Question
The least?developed country members of TRIPS are given a period of 10 years to implement the TRIPS Agreement.
Question
The concept of compulsory licensing is recognized under TRIPS.
Question
Article 19 of TRIPS allows a country to cancel a trademark registration if it is unused for a period of seven years.
Question
Under U.S. law, patent rights automatically vest in the inventor at the time of invention.
Question
The EU trademark is not currently recognized in all fifteen member countries.
Question
Compulsory licenses are government grants of statutory rights to use someone else's intellectual property rights.
Question
In the United States, the four general types of intellectual property protection include all of the following except:

A) Copyright
B) Trademark
C) Trade secrets
D) Licensing
E) Patent
Question
_________ protects words, names, and other symbols that are used to identify a company's goods and to distinguish them from those manufactured by others:

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
Question
________ protects works of original authorship from unauthorized duplication, modification, or distribution.

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade Secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
Question
_________ protects inventions that are "novel, useful, and non-obvious."

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade Secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
Question
Patentable subject matter includes all of the following except:

A) Machines
B) Manufactured articles
C) Software
D) Processes
E) Material compositions
Question
It became a crime to steal business trade secrets with the passage of the:

A) Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
B) Economic Espionage Act
C) Uniform Trade Secrets Act
D) Copyright and Trade Secret Protection Act
E) None of the above
Question
In the U.S., a patent confers on its owner the exclusive right to manufacture, use, and sell the patented product or process within the United States for a period of:

A) 5 years
B) 10 years
C) 15 years
D) 20 years
E) 25 years
Question
The Federal law that deals with trademark issues is the:

A) Lanham Act
B) Rodgers Act
C) Smoot-Hawley Act
D) Tilley Act
Question
Imports bearing a genuine trademark but imported by a party other than the trademark holder or authorized importer are known as:

A) Black market goods
B) Gray market goods
C) White market goods
D) Red market goods
Question
The two recognized types of dilution in the Federal Trademark Dilution Act are:

A) Watered down; tarnishment
B) Tarnishment; blurring
C) Obscurement, blurring
D) Watered down; blurring
E) Tarnishment; obscurement
Question
Under U.S. patent, the notion there need not be an exact copying of an invention to prove a case of patent infringement is known as the:

A) Law of similar goods
B) As-good-as doctrine
C) Doctrine of equivalents
D) Doctrine of comparable goods
Question
If an author contributes an article to be included in a collected work, then U.S. copyright law holds that:

A) The author loses copyright to his contribution
B) The author retains copyright for his contribution only
C) The producer of the collective work obtains a copyright in the collective work
D) A & C only
E) B & C only
Question
Published works are eligible for copyright protection in the United States if:

A) The author is a national of the U.S
B) The author is domiciled in the U.S.
C) The work is first published in the U.S.
D) A & C only
E) All of the above
Question
The right of an owner of copyrighted material to sell or otherwise dispose of purchased copyrighted materials without permission of the copyright owner is recognized by the Supreme Court through the:

A) First sale doctrine
B) Public domain doctrine
C) Fair use doctrine
D) None of the above
Question
All of the following are intellectual property conventions except:

A) Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property
B) Hague Convention Concerning Intellectual Property in Semi-Conductor Masks
C) Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
D) Universal Copyright Convention
Question
The _________ recognized for the first time that photographic works were to be given copyright protection.

A) Berlin Act of 1908
B) Rome Act of 1928
C) Brussels Act of 1948
D) Stockholm Act of 1967
Question
Protocols to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property have been adopted which provide more specific standards in all of the following areas except:

A) Telecommunications services
B) Information technology
C) Financial services
D) Management consulting
Question
Transitional provisions incorporated into TRIPS allow developing countries and former communist countries ________ years to implement the requirements of the agreement.

A) 3 years
B) 4 years
C) 5 years
D) 6 years
E) 7 years
Question
Under Article 63's _________, countries are required to transmit copies of their laws and regulations pertaining to intellectual property to the Council for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property:

A) National treatment principal
B) Most favored nation principal
C) Transparency principal
D) None of the above
Question
A system that allocates rights to a patent or trademark based upon the "first to register" rule is referred to as a:

A) Distributive system
B) Attributive system
C) Registration system
D) None of the above
Question
The U.S. owner of an intellectual property right whose right has been infringed in a foreign country must enforce his right through:

A) Local law
B) U.S. law
C) WIPO
D) WTO
E) None of the above
Question
Discuss American trademark law. In particular, focus on the factors the courts will examine to determine if a trademark infringement has occurred.
Question
What is trademark dilution? Compare the concepts of 'blurring' and 'tarnishment'. What must a plaintiff establish in order to prove trademark dilution?
Question
Discuss the three general exceptions to exclusive copyright protection.
Question
Discuss the Paris Treaty and the rights and duties it grants to a U.S. intellectual property holder looking to secure foreign trademark or patent rights.
Question
Discuss the rights protected under the Berne Convention and its subsequent amendments.
Question
A licensor is the owner of intellectual property rights.
Question
The licensor pays the licensee a royalty for the use of intellectual property.
Question
Licensing generally poses fewer financial and legal risks than foreign direct investment.
Question
U.S. antitrust law generally prohibits international technology licensing agreements that unreasonably restrict imports of competing goods or technology into the United States.
Question
In the U.S. an intellectual property license must be registered with the Commerce Department.
Question
In the U.S. a transfer of copyright ownership is not valid unless it is in writing and signed by the owner.
Question
The laws concerning international property protection are fairly harmonized throughout the world.
Question
In Russia, the failure to register a licensing agreement with the government invalidates the agreement.
Question
EU law is generally silent on licensing agreements that include territorial restrictions on where a licensee may sell product.
Question
An improvement to a technology made by a licensee automatically becomes the property of the licensor.
Question
The aim of technology transfer laws is to protect and promote competition.
Question
The courts in developing countries will generally disregard choice of law clauses in licensing agreements that favor the law of the licensor.
Question
A 'most favored licensee clause' requires the licensor to provide the same royalty rate and terms to the licensee that he subsequently gives to another competitive licensee.
Question
A third party that provides a service that allows a licensee to avoid restrictions found in its patent grant (license) is guilty of "induced infringement."
Question
Non-reciprocal grant back clauses are generally enforced in United States courts unless they are held to violate the antitrust laws.
Question
Royalties based upon increases in the licensee's overall sales are known as Momentum royalties.
Question
Host country anti-trust, technology transfer, and consumer protection laws can usually be avoided through contractual agreement.
Question
The U.S. Supreme Court in Brulotte v. Thys Co. held that an agreement that extends royalties beyond the life of a patent is enforceable.
Question
In the U.S., if a licensing agreement is silent as to duration, then the courts will usually imply that it was intended to grant rights for the entire statutory term of the patent, copyright, or trademark.
Question
In determining a royalty rate, the use of gross sales is generally favorable to the licensee, while net sales favor the licensor.
Question
In the United Sates, a licensee has the right to sue third parties for patent infringement pertaining to the licensed property.
Question
No-challenge clauses are generally not valid under U.S. law.
Question
In most cases, the licensing of information is governed by the UCC.
Question
Computer information transactions are governed by UCITA.
Question
Under UCITA, a contract can be formed between a computer and a person, but not by two computers.
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Deck 15: Law of Intellectual Property Rights Licensing
1
Some developing countries bar the use of foreign brands or trademarks.
True
2
In the U.S., trade secrets are protected under federal statutory law.
False
3
The European Union has the most restrictive intellectual property law in the world.
True
4
Trademark law protects works of original authorship.
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k this deck
5
Copyright protection does not begin until a copyright notice is placed on the work and registered with the Copyright Office.
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k this deck
6
As long as a trademark does not become generic, it may be perpetually renewed.
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7
Trade secrets may be protected perpetually in all circumstances.
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8
The Economic Espionage Act designates confidential customer lists as protected trade secrets.
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9
Most countries in the world award patents on a first to invent basis.
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10
A trademark registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office remains in force for 10 years from the date of registration.
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11
As a general rule, a copyright endures for the life of the work's author plus an additional 70 years after his/her death.
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12
To prove trademark infringement under American law a party must prove that another's use of the registered mark is likely to cause consumer confusion.
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13
Under the Trademark Act, it is required that a mark be registered in order to be able to bring a false designation of origin claim.
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14
Blurring is a type of trademark dilution in which the trademark is linked to products of shoddy quality.
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15
The fair use doctrine allows others to use small portions of a copyright work in the creation of another work.
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16
Materials in the public domain are not afforded copyright protection.
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17
The importation of gray market goods is closely monitored by the Customs Service.
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18
Once a trademark owner sells his product, the buyer ordinarily may resell the product under the original mark without incurring any trademark law liability.
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19
Bootlegging is an unauthorized duplication of a performance already reduced to a sound recording and commercially released.
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20
The Berne Convention firmly established what types of literary and artistic works are to be protected by signatory countries.
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21
The Rome Act of 1928 recognized the moral rights of authors to object to any distortion or other modification of the work.
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k this deck
22
The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) is enforced under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).
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23
TRIPS recognizes a country's right to limit the granting of intellectual property rights when they violate antitrust laws
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24
The least?developed country members of TRIPS are given a period of 10 years to implement the TRIPS Agreement.
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25
The concept of compulsory licensing is recognized under TRIPS.
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26
Article 19 of TRIPS allows a country to cancel a trademark registration if it is unused for a period of seven years.
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27
Under U.S. law, patent rights automatically vest in the inventor at the time of invention.
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k this deck
28
The EU trademark is not currently recognized in all fifteen member countries.
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k this deck
29
Compulsory licenses are government grants of statutory rights to use someone else's intellectual property rights.
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k this deck
30
In the United States, the four general types of intellectual property protection include all of the following except:

A) Copyright
B) Trademark
C) Trade secrets
D) Licensing
E) Patent
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k this deck
31
_________ protects words, names, and other symbols that are used to identify a company's goods and to distinguish them from those manufactured by others:

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
________ protects works of original authorship from unauthorized duplication, modification, or distribution.

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade Secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
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k this deck
33
_________ protects inventions that are "novel, useful, and non-obvious."

A) Copyright law
B) Licensing law
C) Trade Secret law
D) Patent law
E) Trademark law
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
34
Patentable subject matter includes all of the following except:

A) Machines
B) Manufactured articles
C) Software
D) Processes
E) Material compositions
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
It became a crime to steal business trade secrets with the passage of the:

A) Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
B) Economic Espionage Act
C) Uniform Trade Secrets Act
D) Copyright and Trade Secret Protection Act
E) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In the U.S., a patent confers on its owner the exclusive right to manufacture, use, and sell the patented product or process within the United States for a period of:

A) 5 years
B) 10 years
C) 15 years
D) 20 years
E) 25 years
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The Federal law that deals with trademark issues is the:

A) Lanham Act
B) Rodgers Act
C) Smoot-Hawley Act
D) Tilley Act
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Imports bearing a genuine trademark but imported by a party other than the trademark holder or authorized importer are known as:

A) Black market goods
B) Gray market goods
C) White market goods
D) Red market goods
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The two recognized types of dilution in the Federal Trademark Dilution Act are:

A) Watered down; tarnishment
B) Tarnishment; blurring
C) Obscurement, blurring
D) Watered down; blurring
E) Tarnishment; obscurement
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Under U.S. patent, the notion there need not be an exact copying of an invention to prove a case of patent infringement is known as the:

A) Law of similar goods
B) As-good-as doctrine
C) Doctrine of equivalents
D) Doctrine of comparable goods
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
If an author contributes an article to be included in a collected work, then U.S. copyright law holds that:

A) The author loses copyright to his contribution
B) The author retains copyright for his contribution only
C) The producer of the collective work obtains a copyright in the collective work
D) A & C only
E) B & C only
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Published works are eligible for copyright protection in the United States if:

A) The author is a national of the U.S
B) The author is domiciled in the U.S.
C) The work is first published in the U.S.
D) A & C only
E) All of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
43
The right of an owner of copyrighted material to sell or otherwise dispose of purchased copyrighted materials without permission of the copyright owner is recognized by the Supreme Court through the:

A) First sale doctrine
B) Public domain doctrine
C) Fair use doctrine
D) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
All of the following are intellectual property conventions except:

A) Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property
B) Hague Convention Concerning Intellectual Property in Semi-Conductor Masks
C) Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
D) Universal Copyright Convention
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The _________ recognized for the first time that photographic works were to be given copyright protection.

A) Berlin Act of 1908
B) Rome Act of 1928
C) Brussels Act of 1948
D) Stockholm Act of 1967
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Protocols to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property have been adopted which provide more specific standards in all of the following areas except:

A) Telecommunications services
B) Information technology
C) Financial services
D) Management consulting
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Transitional provisions incorporated into TRIPS allow developing countries and former communist countries ________ years to implement the requirements of the agreement.

A) 3 years
B) 4 years
C) 5 years
D) 6 years
E) 7 years
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Under Article 63's _________, countries are required to transmit copies of their laws and regulations pertaining to intellectual property to the Council for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property:

A) National treatment principal
B) Most favored nation principal
C) Transparency principal
D) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
A system that allocates rights to a patent or trademark based upon the "first to register" rule is referred to as a:

A) Distributive system
B) Attributive system
C) Registration system
D) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The U.S. owner of an intellectual property right whose right has been infringed in a foreign country must enforce his right through:

A) Local law
B) U.S. law
C) WIPO
D) WTO
E) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Discuss American trademark law. In particular, focus on the factors the courts will examine to determine if a trademark infringement has occurred.
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k this deck
52
What is trademark dilution? Compare the concepts of 'blurring' and 'tarnishment'. What must a plaintiff establish in order to prove trademark dilution?
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k this deck
53
Discuss the three general exceptions to exclusive copyright protection.
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k this deck
54
Discuss the Paris Treaty and the rights and duties it grants to a U.S. intellectual property holder looking to secure foreign trademark or patent rights.
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k this deck
55
Discuss the rights protected under the Berne Convention and its subsequent amendments.
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k this deck
56
A licensor is the owner of intellectual property rights.
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k this deck
57
The licensor pays the licensee a royalty for the use of intellectual property.
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k this deck
58
Licensing generally poses fewer financial and legal risks than foreign direct investment.
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k this deck
59
U.S. antitrust law generally prohibits international technology licensing agreements that unreasonably restrict imports of competing goods or technology into the United States.
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k this deck
60
In the U.S. an intellectual property license must be registered with the Commerce Department.
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k this deck
61
In the U.S. a transfer of copyright ownership is not valid unless it is in writing and signed by the owner.
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k this deck
62
The laws concerning international property protection are fairly harmonized throughout the world.
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k this deck
63
In Russia, the failure to register a licensing agreement with the government invalidates the agreement.
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k this deck
64
EU law is generally silent on licensing agreements that include territorial restrictions on where a licensee may sell product.
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k this deck
65
An improvement to a technology made by a licensee automatically becomes the property of the licensor.
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k this deck
66
The aim of technology transfer laws is to protect and promote competition.
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k this deck
67
The courts in developing countries will generally disregard choice of law clauses in licensing agreements that favor the law of the licensor.
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k this deck
68
A 'most favored licensee clause' requires the licensor to provide the same royalty rate and terms to the licensee that he subsequently gives to another competitive licensee.
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k this deck
69
A third party that provides a service that allows a licensee to avoid restrictions found in its patent grant (license) is guilty of "induced infringement."
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k this deck
70
Non-reciprocal grant back clauses are generally enforced in United States courts unless they are held to violate the antitrust laws.
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k this deck
71
Royalties based upon increases in the licensee's overall sales are known as Momentum royalties.
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k this deck
72
Host country anti-trust, technology transfer, and consumer protection laws can usually be avoided through contractual agreement.
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k this deck
73
The U.S. Supreme Court in Brulotte v. Thys Co. held that an agreement that extends royalties beyond the life of a patent is enforceable.
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k this deck
74
In the U.S., if a licensing agreement is silent as to duration, then the courts will usually imply that it was intended to grant rights for the entire statutory term of the patent, copyright, or trademark.
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75
In determining a royalty rate, the use of gross sales is generally favorable to the licensee, while net sales favor the licensor.
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76
In the United Sates, a licensee has the right to sue third parties for patent infringement pertaining to the licensed property.
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77
No-challenge clauses are generally not valid under U.S. law.
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78
In most cases, the licensing of information is governed by the UCC.
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k this deck
79
Computer information transactions are governed by UCITA.
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80
Under UCITA, a contract can be formed between a computer and a person, but not by two computers.
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k this deck
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