Deck 12: The Importance of Intellectual Property

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Question
Since the first patent was granted, there have been over ________ patents granted in the United States.

A) 500,000
B) 3 million
C) 5 million
D) 7 million
E) 9 million
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Question
Which of the following is an example of intellectual property?

A) Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Washington
B) Nike's swoosh logo
C) the computer that you use
D) AirTran's fleet of planes
E) the trucks that deliver White Wave soymilk to grocery stores
Question
Which of the following was not identified in the textbook as one of the common mistakes that entrepreneurs make regarding intellectual property?

A) not fully recognizing the value of their intellectual property
B) not properly identifying all their intellectual property
C) not properly registering their Internet domain names
D) not using their intellectual property as part of their overall plan for success
E) not taking sufficient steps to protect their intellectual property
Question
A utility patent is good for ________ from the date of the original application, a design patent is good for ________ from the date the patent is granted, and a plant patent is good for ________ from the date of the original application.

A) 14 years, 14 years, 20 years
B) 20 years, 20 years, 14 years
C) 20 years, 20 years, 20 years
D) 20 years, 14 years, 20 years
E) 14 years, 20 years, 14 years
Question
Which form of intellectual property protection is the only one expressly mentioned in the original articles of the U.S. Constitution?

A) assurances
B) patents
C) copyrights
D) trade secrets
E) trademarks
Question
Which of the following isn't an example of intellectual property?

A) Proactiv's formula for acne medication
B) Yahoo's trademark
C) the Internet domain name www.starbucks.com
D) Microsoft's Window operating system
E) a computer mouse
Question
________ patents are the second most common type of patent and cover the invention of new, original, and ornamental designs for manufactured products.

A) Aesthetic
B) Utility
C) Visual
D) Blueprint
E) Design
Question
Ecovative Design, the company profiled in the opening feature for Chapter 12, makes an organic building insulation from mushrooms. Ecovative Design received a big boost in late 2008 when it won the coveted Picnic Green Challenge Prize in Amsterdam, Holland. In U.S. dollars, the prize was approximately:

A) $25,000
B) $50,000
C) $100,000
D) $250,000
E) $750,000
Question
There are three basic requirements for a patent to be granted. The subject of the patent application must be:

A) useful, difficult to copy, and novel in relational to prior arts in the field
B) based on cutting edge science or technology, not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the filed, and rare
C) useful, novel in relation to prior arts in the field, and not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the field
D) rare, difficult to copy, and not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the field
E) useful, scientific, and novel in relation to prior arts in the field
Question
________ patents are the most common type of patent and cover what we generally think of as new inventions.

A) Value
B) Product
C) Method
D) Utility
E) Design
Question
Which of the following is not one of the four key forms of intellectual property protection?

A) trade secrets
B) copyrights
C) trademarks
D) innovations
E) patents
Question
The term of a utility patent is:

A) 7 years from the date the patent is granted
B) 15 years from the date of the initial application
C) 15 years from the date the patent is granted
D) 20 years from the date of the initial application
E) 20 years from the date the patent is granted
Question
A grant from the federal government conferring the rights to exclude others from making, selling, or using an invention for a specific period of time is referred to as a:

A) trademark
B) copyright
C) idea secret
D) innovation
E) patent
Question
Amazon.com's one-click ordering system, Priceline.com's "name-your-price" business model and Netflix's method for allowing customers to set up a rental list of movies they want mailed to them are examples of:

A) copyright extension patents
B) utility patents
C) business process protection patents
D) trademark extension patents
E) business method patents
Question
Which of the following are the four key forms of intellectual property protection?

A) patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets
B) discoveries, convents, trademarks, patents
C) patents, official documents, copyrights, inventions
D) discoveries, Internet domain names, innovations, trademarks
E) convents, inventions, opportunities, and copyrights
Question
The sole entity responsible for granting patents in the United States is the:

A) U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
B) Federal Patent, Copyright and Trademark Office
C) Securities and Exchange Commission
D) U.S. Departments of Patents
E) U.S. Treasury Department
Question
The What Went Wrong feature in Chapter 12 focuses on Dippin' Dots, a company that sells ice cream snacks. Dippin' Dot's lost the patent on its small beads of ice cream primarily because:

A) it failed to obtain permission from a patent holder that has "prior art" pertaining to the claims in its patent
B) it had sold its ice cream product one year prior to applying for a patent
C) it filed its patent application incorrectly
D) its patent infringes on the patent of a competitor
E) it failed to renew its patent on time
Question
________ takes place when one party engages in the unauthorized use of another party's patent.

A) Patent breach
B) Patent encroachment
C) Patent violation
D) Patent infraction
E) Patent infringement
Question
Which of the following selections correctly identifies the three types of patents?

A) manufacturing patents, process patents, and plant patents
B) usefulness patents, purpose patents, and genetic patents
C) explicit patents, implicit patents, and plant patents
D) utility patents, design patents, and plant patents
E) manufacturing patents, service patents, and other patents
Question
There are two primary rules of thumb for deciding if intellectual property protection should be pursued for a particular intellectual asset. First, a firm should determine if the intellectual property in question is directly related to its competitive advantage. Second, a firm should determine if its intellectual property:

A) is less than 20 years old
B) could be licensed to another company
C) has value in the marketplace
D) is something that was developed "in-house"
E) rightfully belongs to the firm or the employees who developed it
Question
A company's customer list is most commonly protected under ________ regulations.

A) patent
B) copyright
C) trade secret
D) trademark
E) collective mark
Question
________ occurs when one work derives from another or is an exact copy or shows substantial similarity to the original work.

A) Copyright infringement
B) Copyright violation
C) Copyright intrusion
D) Copyright breach
E) Copyright violation
Question
According to current regulations, any copyrightable work created on or after January 1, 1978, is protected by copyright law for the life of the author plus:

A) 28.5 years
B) 101 years
C) 40 years
D) 55 years
E) 70 years
Question
Which of the following is not generally eligible for trademark protection?

A) trade dress
B) shapes
C) words
D) surnames
E) designs or logos
Question
Copyright law is governed by the:

A) U.S. Constitution
B) The 1946 Intellectual Property Act
C) The 1966 Trademark and Copyright Act
D) The 1955 Inventors and Writer's Protection Act
E) Copyright Revision Act of 1976
Question
Which of the following symbols is the copyright bug?

A) ç
B) €
C) ¢
D) ©
E) ™
Question
If a local band wrote their own rendition of a Celine Dion song, the band could try to copyright their rendition of the song as a:

A) imitative work
B) offshoot work
C) derivative work
D) subsequent work
E) supplemental work
Question
Which of the following is not a type of trademark?

A) trademark
B) certification mark
C) documentation mark
D) collective mark
E) service mark
Question
eHarmony for dating, eBags for bags, and Proactiv for acne medication are examples of:

A) certifications
B) copyrights
C) patents
D) trade secrets
E) trademarks
Question
A form of intellectual property protection that grants to the owner of a work of authorship the legal right to determine how the work is used and to obtain the economic benefits from the work is referred to as a:

A) assurance document
B) patent
C) trade secret
D) brand
E) copyright
Question
________ are similar to ordinary trademarks, but they are used to identify the services or intangible activities of a business rather than a business's physical product.

A) Creative marks
B) Intangible marks
C) Examination marks
D) Service marks
E) Subtle marks
Question
The Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval is an example of a:

A) collective mark
B) shared mark
C) service mark
D) certification mark
E) assessment mark
Question
Which of the following is an example of a certification mark?

A) Overstock.com
B) International Franchise Association
C) Underwriter's Laboratories
D) Rotary International
E) 1-800-FREE-411
Question
The Partnering for Success feature in Chapter 12 starts by talking about Gary Schwartzberg, who along with a partner, developed a new type of bagel, dubbed the "Begeler," that was eventually licenses to Kraft. According to the feature, entrepreneurs and inventors, like Gary Schwartzberg, are finding that large consumer products companies are:

A) are ambivalent about what they have to offer
B) are increasingly interested in what they have to offer for new products, but are ambivalent about services
C) increasingly interested in what they have to offer
D) are increasingly interested in what they have to offer for new services, but are ambivalent about products
E) increasingly disinterested in what they have to offer
Question
There are four types of trademarks:

A) trademarks, service marks, collective marks, and certification marks
B) examination marks, trademarks, combined marks, and service marks
C) shared marks, collective marks, mutual marks, and trademarks
D) service marks, cooperative market, trademarks, and shared marks
E) trademarks, collective marks, documentation marks, and combined marks
Question
________ are trademarks or service marks used by the members of a cooperative, association, or other collective group, including marks indicating membership in a union or similar organization.

A) Collective marks
B) Share marks
C) Examination marks
D) Joint marks
E) Certification marks
Question
A trademark is renewable:

A) every 10 years, as long as the mark remains in use
B) indefinitely, regardless of whether the mark remains in use
C) every 20 years from the date of application for the trademark
D) every 3 years
E) every 33 years
Question
Which of the following statements about copyrights is incorrect?

A) Businesses typically possess a treasure trove of copyrightable material.
B) A musical composition that is written down is copyrightable.
C) Copyrightable material may be in tangible or intangible form.
D) The 1976 Copyright Act governs copyright law in the U.S.
E) A copyright is a form of intellectual property protection.
Question
A trademark is registered with the:

A) U.S. Commerce Department
B) Federal Trade Commission
C) Securities and Exchange Commission
D) Federal Patent, Copyright, and Trademark Office
E) U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
Question
Copyright law protects any work of authorship:

A) 90 days after it is approved by the U.S. Copyright Office
B) one year after it assumes a tangible form
C) the moment it assumes a tangible form
D) as soon as it is approved by the U.S. Copyright Office
E) 30 days after it assumes a tangible form
Question
The ________, which was drafted in 1979 by a special commission, attempted to set nationwide standards for trade secret legislation.

A) Intangible Assets Protection Act
B) Fairness in Intellectual Property Act
C) Uniform Trade Secrets Act
D) Trademark & Copyright Act
E) Economic Espionage Act
Question
The owner of a patent is granted a legal monopoly for an unlimited period of time.
Question
The Savvy Entrepreneurial Firm feature in Chapter 12 focuses on a copyright infringement case involving the owners of work originally produced by Elvis Presley and Passport Video, a company that produced a video documentary of Elvis' life. Passport Video, which did not get permission to use songs, interviews and other material produced by Elvis and used in the documentary, claimed they did not need formal approval because the documentary on Elvis' life was scholarly research and should therefore be protected under the ________ exemption to copyright law.

A) trivial infringement
B) minor application
C) fair use
D) slight use
E) incidental utilization
Question
According to the textbook, trade secret disputes arise most frequently when:

A) one firm alleges that it can legally use another firm's trade secrets because they were "voluntarily" disclosed
B) an employees leaves a firm to join a competitor and is accused of taking confidential information with him or her
C) one firm claims that another firm outright stole its trade secrets
D) one firms claims that what another firm is claiming as a trade secret is common knowledge
E) one firm claims that it obtained another firm's trade secrets through legal means
Question
The average time for the approval of a patent is 16 months.
Question
A trademark is a word, name, symbol, or device used to identify the source or origin of products or services and to distinguish those products or services from others.
Question
A utility patent can be obtained for a new product or process or the "idea" for a new product or process.
Question
Combinations of numbers and letters, such as 3M and 1-800-FREE-411, cannot be trademarked.
Question
The federal Economic Espionage Act, passed in 1996, criminalizes:

A) copyright infringement
B) utility patent violations
C) trademark violations
D) design patent violations
E) the theft of trade secrets
Question
Consider the following questions: Are products under development that require patent protection?; Are we in compliance with the copyright license agreements into which we have entered?; Is anyone infringing on our trademarks; and Are company trade secrets leaking out to competitors? These are the types of questions that would be asked when conducting a(n):

A) intangible material examination
B) intellectual property inventory
C) intangible material inspection
D) patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret review
E) intellectual property audit
Question
Certification marks are similar to ordinary trademarks, but they are used to identify the services or intangible activities of a business rather than a business's physical product.
Question
Patents, trademarks, copyrights, and licenses are the four key forms of intellectual property.
Question
A patent is a grant from the federal government conferring the rights to exclude others from making, selling, or using an invention for the term of the trademark.
Question
There are two primary reasons to conduct an intellectual property audit. First, it is prudent for a company to periodically determine whether its intellectual property is being properly protected. The second reason for a company to conduct an intellectual property audit is to:

A) remained prepared for a Security & Exchange Commission spot inspection
B) remain prepared to justify its value in the event of a merger or acquisition
C) remain prepared for an initial public offering
D) update the value of its intellectual property on its balance sheet
E) make sure no intellectual property has been stolen
Question
An ________ is conducted to determine the intellectual property a company owns.

A) intellectual property audit
B) intangible materials audit
C) academic property inventory
D) intellectual materials inventory
E) intangible property inventory
Question
Which of the following items would typically be protected by a form of intellectual property protection other than trade secret statutes?

A) financial forecast
B) product formula
C) a company's tagline
D) logs of sales calls
E) employee roster
Question
A ________ is any formula, pattern, physical device, idea, process, or other information that provides the owner of the information with a competitive advantage in the marketplace.

A) patent
B) copyright
C) trademark
D) trade secret
E) certification mark
Question
________ include marketing plans, product formulas, financial forecasts, employee rosters, logs of sales calls, and laboratory notebooks.

A) Trade secrets
B) Trademarks
C) Collective marks
D) Patents
E) Copyrights
Question
Utility patents are the most common type of patent and cover what we generally think of as new inventions.
Question
Intellectual property is any product of human intellect that is intangible but has value in the marketplace.
Question
A copyright is a form of intellectual property protection that grants to the owner of a work of authorship the legal right to determine how the work is used and to obtain the economic benefits from the work.
Question
A trade secret is any formula, pattern, physical device, idea, process, or other information that provides the owner of the information with a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
Question
What is a copyright? What is protected by a copyright?
Question
Trade secret disputes arise most frequently when one firm alleges that a trade secret claimed by another firm is common knowledge, and can therefore be used by anyone.
Question
An intellectual property audit is conducted to determine the intellectual property a company owns.
Question
Computer software is not covered by copyright law.
Question
Trademark law falls under the Lanham Act, which passed in 1946.
Question
The 1976 Copyright Revision Act governs copyright law in the U.S.
Question
The federal Economic Espionage Act, passed in 1996, criminalizes the theft of trade secrets.
Question
Identify and briefly describe the three types of patents.
Question
What is a trademark? Why are trademarks important?
Question
A trademark consisting primarily of a surname, such as Jones or Smith, is typically not protectable.
Question
What are the two primary rules of thumb for determining whether intellectual property protection should be pursued for a particular intellectual asset?
Question
Copyright infringement occurs when one work derives from another or is an exact copy.
Question
What is intellectual property? Why is it called "intellectual" property? Why is intellectual property such an important issue for entrepreneurial firms?
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Deck 12: The Importance of Intellectual Property
1
Since the first patent was granted, there have been over ________ patents granted in the United States.

A) 500,000
B) 3 million
C) 5 million
D) 7 million
E) 9 million
D
2
Which of the following is an example of intellectual property?

A) Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Washington
B) Nike's swoosh logo
C) the computer that you use
D) AirTran's fleet of planes
E) the trucks that deliver White Wave soymilk to grocery stores
B
3
Which of the following was not identified in the textbook as one of the common mistakes that entrepreneurs make regarding intellectual property?

A) not fully recognizing the value of their intellectual property
B) not properly identifying all their intellectual property
C) not properly registering their Internet domain names
D) not using their intellectual property as part of their overall plan for success
E) not taking sufficient steps to protect their intellectual property
C
4
A utility patent is good for ________ from the date of the original application, a design patent is good for ________ from the date the patent is granted, and a plant patent is good for ________ from the date of the original application.

A) 14 years, 14 years, 20 years
B) 20 years, 20 years, 14 years
C) 20 years, 20 years, 20 years
D) 20 years, 14 years, 20 years
E) 14 years, 20 years, 14 years
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k this deck
5
Which form of intellectual property protection is the only one expressly mentioned in the original articles of the U.S. Constitution?

A) assurances
B) patents
C) copyrights
D) trade secrets
E) trademarks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which of the following isn't an example of intellectual property?

A) Proactiv's formula for acne medication
B) Yahoo's trademark
C) the Internet domain name www.starbucks.com
D) Microsoft's Window operating system
E) a computer mouse
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
________ patents are the second most common type of patent and cover the invention of new, original, and ornamental designs for manufactured products.

A) Aesthetic
B) Utility
C) Visual
D) Blueprint
E) Design
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Ecovative Design, the company profiled in the opening feature for Chapter 12, makes an organic building insulation from mushrooms. Ecovative Design received a big boost in late 2008 when it won the coveted Picnic Green Challenge Prize in Amsterdam, Holland. In U.S. dollars, the prize was approximately:

A) $25,000
B) $50,000
C) $100,000
D) $250,000
E) $750,000
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
There are three basic requirements for a patent to be granted. The subject of the patent application must be:

A) useful, difficult to copy, and novel in relational to prior arts in the field
B) based on cutting edge science or technology, not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the filed, and rare
C) useful, novel in relation to prior arts in the field, and not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the field
D) rare, difficult to copy, and not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the field
E) useful, scientific, and novel in relation to prior arts in the field
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
________ patents are the most common type of patent and cover what we generally think of as new inventions.

A) Value
B) Product
C) Method
D) Utility
E) Design
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following is not one of the four key forms of intellectual property protection?

A) trade secrets
B) copyrights
C) trademarks
D) innovations
E) patents
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Unlock Deck
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12
The term of a utility patent is:

A) 7 years from the date the patent is granted
B) 15 years from the date of the initial application
C) 15 years from the date the patent is granted
D) 20 years from the date of the initial application
E) 20 years from the date the patent is granted
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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13
A grant from the federal government conferring the rights to exclude others from making, selling, or using an invention for a specific period of time is referred to as a:

A) trademark
B) copyright
C) idea secret
D) innovation
E) patent
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Amazon.com's one-click ordering system, Priceline.com's "name-your-price" business model and Netflix's method for allowing customers to set up a rental list of movies they want mailed to them are examples of:

A) copyright extension patents
B) utility patents
C) business process protection patents
D) trademark extension patents
E) business method patents
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following are the four key forms of intellectual property protection?

A) patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets
B) discoveries, convents, trademarks, patents
C) patents, official documents, copyrights, inventions
D) discoveries, Internet domain names, innovations, trademarks
E) convents, inventions, opportunities, and copyrights
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16
The sole entity responsible for granting patents in the United States is the:

A) U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
B) Federal Patent, Copyright and Trademark Office
C) Securities and Exchange Commission
D) U.S. Departments of Patents
E) U.S. Treasury Department
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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17
The What Went Wrong feature in Chapter 12 focuses on Dippin' Dots, a company that sells ice cream snacks. Dippin' Dot's lost the patent on its small beads of ice cream primarily because:

A) it failed to obtain permission from a patent holder that has "prior art" pertaining to the claims in its patent
B) it had sold its ice cream product one year prior to applying for a patent
C) it filed its patent application incorrectly
D) its patent infringes on the patent of a competitor
E) it failed to renew its patent on time
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
18
________ takes place when one party engages in the unauthorized use of another party's patent.

A) Patent breach
B) Patent encroachment
C) Patent violation
D) Patent infraction
E) Patent infringement
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Unlock Deck
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19
Which of the following selections correctly identifies the three types of patents?

A) manufacturing patents, process patents, and plant patents
B) usefulness patents, purpose patents, and genetic patents
C) explicit patents, implicit patents, and plant patents
D) utility patents, design patents, and plant patents
E) manufacturing patents, service patents, and other patents
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
There are two primary rules of thumb for deciding if intellectual property protection should be pursued for a particular intellectual asset. First, a firm should determine if the intellectual property in question is directly related to its competitive advantage. Second, a firm should determine if its intellectual property:

A) is less than 20 years old
B) could be licensed to another company
C) has value in the marketplace
D) is something that was developed "in-house"
E) rightfully belongs to the firm or the employees who developed it
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A company's customer list is most commonly protected under ________ regulations.

A) patent
B) copyright
C) trade secret
D) trademark
E) collective mark
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
________ occurs when one work derives from another or is an exact copy or shows substantial similarity to the original work.

A) Copyright infringement
B) Copyright violation
C) Copyright intrusion
D) Copyright breach
E) Copyright violation
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
According to current regulations, any copyrightable work created on or after January 1, 1978, is protected by copyright law for the life of the author plus:

A) 28.5 years
B) 101 years
C) 40 years
D) 55 years
E) 70 years
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following is not generally eligible for trademark protection?

A) trade dress
B) shapes
C) words
D) surnames
E) designs or logos
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Copyright law is governed by the:

A) U.S. Constitution
B) The 1946 Intellectual Property Act
C) The 1966 Trademark and Copyright Act
D) The 1955 Inventors and Writer's Protection Act
E) Copyright Revision Act of 1976
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which of the following symbols is the copyright bug?

A) ç
B) €
C) ¢
D) ©
E) ™
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
If a local band wrote their own rendition of a Celine Dion song, the band could try to copyright their rendition of the song as a:

A) imitative work
B) offshoot work
C) derivative work
D) subsequent work
E) supplemental work
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following is not a type of trademark?

A) trademark
B) certification mark
C) documentation mark
D) collective mark
E) service mark
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
eHarmony for dating, eBags for bags, and Proactiv for acne medication are examples of:

A) certifications
B) copyrights
C) patents
D) trade secrets
E) trademarks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A form of intellectual property protection that grants to the owner of a work of authorship the legal right to determine how the work is used and to obtain the economic benefits from the work is referred to as a:

A) assurance document
B) patent
C) trade secret
D) brand
E) copyright
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
________ are similar to ordinary trademarks, but they are used to identify the services or intangible activities of a business rather than a business's physical product.

A) Creative marks
B) Intangible marks
C) Examination marks
D) Service marks
E) Subtle marks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval is an example of a:

A) collective mark
B) shared mark
C) service mark
D) certification mark
E) assessment mark
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following is an example of a certification mark?

A) Overstock.com
B) International Franchise Association
C) Underwriter's Laboratories
D) Rotary International
E) 1-800-FREE-411
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The Partnering for Success feature in Chapter 12 starts by talking about Gary Schwartzberg, who along with a partner, developed a new type of bagel, dubbed the "Begeler," that was eventually licenses to Kraft. According to the feature, entrepreneurs and inventors, like Gary Schwartzberg, are finding that large consumer products companies are:

A) are ambivalent about what they have to offer
B) are increasingly interested in what they have to offer for new products, but are ambivalent about services
C) increasingly interested in what they have to offer
D) are increasingly interested in what they have to offer for new services, but are ambivalent about products
E) increasingly disinterested in what they have to offer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
There are four types of trademarks:

A) trademarks, service marks, collective marks, and certification marks
B) examination marks, trademarks, combined marks, and service marks
C) shared marks, collective marks, mutual marks, and trademarks
D) service marks, cooperative market, trademarks, and shared marks
E) trademarks, collective marks, documentation marks, and combined marks
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36
________ are trademarks or service marks used by the members of a cooperative, association, or other collective group, including marks indicating membership in a union or similar organization.

A) Collective marks
B) Share marks
C) Examination marks
D) Joint marks
E) Certification marks
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37
A trademark is renewable:

A) every 10 years, as long as the mark remains in use
B) indefinitely, regardless of whether the mark remains in use
C) every 20 years from the date of application for the trademark
D) every 3 years
E) every 33 years
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38
Which of the following statements about copyrights is incorrect?

A) Businesses typically possess a treasure trove of copyrightable material.
B) A musical composition that is written down is copyrightable.
C) Copyrightable material may be in tangible or intangible form.
D) The 1976 Copyright Act governs copyright law in the U.S.
E) A copyright is a form of intellectual property protection.
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39
A trademark is registered with the:

A) U.S. Commerce Department
B) Federal Trade Commission
C) Securities and Exchange Commission
D) Federal Patent, Copyright, and Trademark Office
E) U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
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40
Copyright law protects any work of authorship:

A) 90 days after it is approved by the U.S. Copyright Office
B) one year after it assumes a tangible form
C) the moment it assumes a tangible form
D) as soon as it is approved by the U.S. Copyright Office
E) 30 days after it assumes a tangible form
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41
The ________, which was drafted in 1979 by a special commission, attempted to set nationwide standards for trade secret legislation.

A) Intangible Assets Protection Act
B) Fairness in Intellectual Property Act
C) Uniform Trade Secrets Act
D) Trademark & Copyright Act
E) Economic Espionage Act
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42
The owner of a patent is granted a legal monopoly for an unlimited period of time.
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43
The Savvy Entrepreneurial Firm feature in Chapter 12 focuses on a copyright infringement case involving the owners of work originally produced by Elvis Presley and Passport Video, a company that produced a video documentary of Elvis' life. Passport Video, which did not get permission to use songs, interviews and other material produced by Elvis and used in the documentary, claimed they did not need formal approval because the documentary on Elvis' life was scholarly research and should therefore be protected under the ________ exemption to copyright law.

A) trivial infringement
B) minor application
C) fair use
D) slight use
E) incidental utilization
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44
According to the textbook, trade secret disputes arise most frequently when:

A) one firm alleges that it can legally use another firm's trade secrets because they were "voluntarily" disclosed
B) an employees leaves a firm to join a competitor and is accused of taking confidential information with him or her
C) one firm claims that another firm outright stole its trade secrets
D) one firms claims that what another firm is claiming as a trade secret is common knowledge
E) one firm claims that it obtained another firm's trade secrets through legal means
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45
The average time for the approval of a patent is 16 months.
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46
A trademark is a word, name, symbol, or device used to identify the source or origin of products or services and to distinguish those products or services from others.
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47
A utility patent can be obtained for a new product or process or the "idea" for a new product or process.
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48
Combinations of numbers and letters, such as 3M and 1-800-FREE-411, cannot be trademarked.
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49
The federal Economic Espionage Act, passed in 1996, criminalizes:

A) copyright infringement
B) utility patent violations
C) trademark violations
D) design patent violations
E) the theft of trade secrets
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50
Consider the following questions: Are products under development that require patent protection?; Are we in compliance with the copyright license agreements into which we have entered?; Is anyone infringing on our trademarks; and Are company trade secrets leaking out to competitors? These are the types of questions that would be asked when conducting a(n):

A) intangible material examination
B) intellectual property inventory
C) intangible material inspection
D) patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret review
E) intellectual property audit
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51
Certification marks are similar to ordinary trademarks, but they are used to identify the services or intangible activities of a business rather than a business's physical product.
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52
Patents, trademarks, copyrights, and licenses are the four key forms of intellectual property.
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53
A patent is a grant from the federal government conferring the rights to exclude others from making, selling, or using an invention for the term of the trademark.
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54
There are two primary reasons to conduct an intellectual property audit. First, it is prudent for a company to periodically determine whether its intellectual property is being properly protected. The second reason for a company to conduct an intellectual property audit is to:

A) remained prepared for a Security & Exchange Commission spot inspection
B) remain prepared to justify its value in the event of a merger or acquisition
C) remain prepared for an initial public offering
D) update the value of its intellectual property on its balance sheet
E) make sure no intellectual property has been stolen
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55
An ________ is conducted to determine the intellectual property a company owns.

A) intellectual property audit
B) intangible materials audit
C) academic property inventory
D) intellectual materials inventory
E) intangible property inventory
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56
Which of the following items would typically be protected by a form of intellectual property protection other than trade secret statutes?

A) financial forecast
B) product formula
C) a company's tagline
D) logs of sales calls
E) employee roster
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57
A ________ is any formula, pattern, physical device, idea, process, or other information that provides the owner of the information with a competitive advantage in the marketplace.

A) patent
B) copyright
C) trademark
D) trade secret
E) certification mark
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58
________ include marketing plans, product formulas, financial forecasts, employee rosters, logs of sales calls, and laboratory notebooks.

A) Trade secrets
B) Trademarks
C) Collective marks
D) Patents
E) Copyrights
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59
Utility patents are the most common type of patent and cover what we generally think of as new inventions.
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60
Intellectual property is any product of human intellect that is intangible but has value in the marketplace.
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61
A copyright is a form of intellectual property protection that grants to the owner of a work of authorship the legal right to determine how the work is used and to obtain the economic benefits from the work.
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62
A trade secret is any formula, pattern, physical device, idea, process, or other information that provides the owner of the information with a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
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63
What is a copyright? What is protected by a copyright?
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64
Trade secret disputes arise most frequently when one firm alleges that a trade secret claimed by another firm is common knowledge, and can therefore be used by anyone.
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65
An intellectual property audit is conducted to determine the intellectual property a company owns.
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66
Computer software is not covered by copyright law.
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67
Trademark law falls under the Lanham Act, which passed in 1946.
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68
The 1976 Copyright Revision Act governs copyright law in the U.S.
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69
The federal Economic Espionage Act, passed in 1996, criminalizes the theft of trade secrets.
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70
Identify and briefly describe the three types of patents.
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71
What is a trademark? Why are trademarks important?
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72
A trademark consisting primarily of a surname, such as Jones or Smith, is typically not protectable.
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73
What are the two primary rules of thumb for determining whether intellectual property protection should be pursued for a particular intellectual asset?
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74
Copyright infringement occurs when one work derives from another or is an exact copy.
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75
What is intellectual property? Why is it called "intellectual" property? Why is intellectual property such an important issue for entrepreneurial firms?
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