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en
{"A": "Rearranging a few words from another source and using it as your own idea.", "B": "Copying and pasting a small quote and giving its author credit with a footnote.", "C": "Using your teacher’s lecture ideas in your research paper with proper attribution.", "D": "Copying a paragraph from an encyclopedia without citing the source.", "E": "Having another student write a paper which you present as your own original work."}
ADE
Plagiarism is: (Choose all that apply)
en
{"A": "Common knowledge, e.g. George Washington was the first president of the U.S.", "B": "Quoting from your favorite movie in your research paper with no credit referenced.", "C": "Facts from a U.S. Government website to make a graph for your class presentation.", "D": "Presenting facts from a neighborhood newspaper article about a local school event.", "E": "All of the above."}
A
Which of the following does NOT require original author credit? (Choose all that apply)
en
{"A": "It is your own wording of specific information and ideas expressed by another author.", "B": "It is a very detailed restatement of another author centered on only a single main idea.", "C": "It summarizes an entire book chapter or journal article without any particular main idea.", "D": "All of the choices above are utilized.", "E": "Only choices A. and B. are utilized."}
D
Paraphrasing is a legitimate way (with author credit) to borrow from a source when:
en
{"A": "Rearranging a few words from another source and using it as your own idea.", "B": "Documenting the sources you use in your research paper.", "C": "Keeping good notes on where you found specific ideas for your paper.", "D": "Using quotation marks around exact quotes used in your research.", "E": "Providing a list of sources used at the end of your research paper."}
A
All of the following are ways to avoid plagiarism, except for:
en
{"A": "TRUE"}
A
Copyright is literally the author’s right to control their copy .
en
{"A": "TRUE"}
A
Anything you create is copyrighted the moment it is written, recorded, or copied.
en
{"A": "TRUE"}
A
Fair Use is a legal way to copy another author’s copyrighted material without permission.
en
{"A": "Copy limited portions of materials to support research and learning.", "B": "Copy an entire DVD of the latest blockbuster movie to share with your friends at lunch.", "C": "Copy one factual journal article for your notes to help prepare your research paper.", "D": "Copy a small portion of a subject related song to use in your audio/visual history presentation.", "E": "Copy all the drawings of Snow White, elves, and goblins found in a Grimm’s Fairy Tales book from 1917."}
ACDE
Choose all that may qualify as Fair Use for students classroom and personal use:
en
{"A": "TRUE"}
B
All music and images on the web are available for unlimited copying without author permission.
en
{"A": "An amusing popular dance from the 1960s.", "B": "A transformative re-use of others’ copyrighted works in a way which adds value and makes a new use.", "C": "The latest potato recipe from a new Betty Crocker® cookbook.", "D": "Posting an advertised image of your favorite new car with commentary on your Social Networking webpage.", "E": "Mixing your original keyboard music recording with audio clips of other artists to create a new song."}
BDE
A mash-up is: (Choose all that apply)
en
{"A": "Smart property", "B": "Patent", "C": "Copyright", "D": "Trademark", "E": "Trade Secret"}
A
Which of the following is NOT an intellectual property:
en
{"A": "Suspension from school or college.", "B": "Receiving a failing grade on an assignment or for the entire course.", "C": "Receiving a cease and desist legal notice from a publisher or music recording company.", "D": "Receiving a legal fine or expensive bill for unauthorized use of copyrighted materials.", "E": "All of the above."}
E
Which are possible consequences of classroom plagiarism or copyright infringement?
en
{"A": " Because it is advantageous from a commercial point of view, transmitting security to the market, and allowing for a more economical publicity.", "B": " Because it is the only way to apply for community funding.", "C": " Because it confers the exclusivity in the commercialization and is the only way to prevent third parties from copying your creative initiatives."}
C
WHY IS IT SO IMPORTANT TO PROTECT INNOVATION AND NEW PRODUCTS THROUGH INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS?
en
{"A": " Inventions, utility models, designs, distinctive trade signs, such as trademarks and logotypes.", "B": " Intellectual Property rights, such as copyright.", "C": " All mechanisms that prevent unfair competition."}
A
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS INCLUDE:
en
{"A": " It is new, it involves an inventive step and are susceptible of industrial application.", "B": " It is new and has a certificate attesting the invention.", "C": " It is new, has a report on the Prior Art and are susceptible of industrial application."}
C
AN INNOVATIVE DEVICE HAS BEEN INVENTED. IT MAY ONLY BE PROTECTED BY PATENT IF:
en
{"A": " Never, because the patent publication exposes the invention to any company.", "B": " It can for an undetermined period of time, provided that all annuities are paid.", "C": " It can, for the duration of 20 years, if industrial and commercial capacity exist, and provided that all annuities are paid."}
C
WHEN A PATENT IS GRANTED CAN A MONOPOLY POLICY BE ESTABLISHED IN THE MARKET?
en
{"A": " Nothing, the filed application will automatically be refused.", "B": " You should file a reply to the opposition.", "C": " You should file for the withdrawal of the application in order to not infringe third parties rights."}
B
A TRADEMARK WAS FILED IN THE PORTUGUESE PTO BUT AFTER A FEW WEEKS, A THIRD PARTY HAS OPPOSED THE APPLICATION. WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?
en
{"A": " To improve administrative organization.", "B": " To prevent companies that operate in a certain market to register trademarks that are not adapted to their activity.", "C": " To group trademarks in commercial categories in order to limit its protection to the chosen scope of protection."}
C
WHY ARE TRADEMARKS CATEGORIZED IN DIFFERENT CLASSES?
en
{"A": " Forever, provided it is renewed every 10 years.", "B": " It has the duration of 20 years, renewable at 10 years from its date of registration.", "C": " It can exist during the period in which its product or service is commercialized, extended by 10 years."}
A
WHAT IS THE DURATION IN MARKET OF A REGISTERED TRADEMARK?
en
{"A": " If I cannot patent it, I should not try to obtain its exclusive use.", "B": " I should begin production and commercialization without protection.", "C": " I can protect the product through design."}
C
A KITCHEN APPLIANCE WAS CREATED, BUT IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO FILE FOR ITS PATENTE. HOW CAN I PROTECT THE EXCLUSIVITY OF THIS PRODUCT?
en
{"A": " No, they are intangible assets.", "B": " Yes, they are subject to evaluation and commercialization, and can also be included in the financial sheets as any other asset belonging to the same owner.", "C": " Yes, and they also be commercialized, but do not have a value by itself."}
B
PATENT AND TRADEMARKS CAN BE EVALUATED AS AN ASSET?
en
{"A": " When exporting, the industrial property rights have to be protected in the target jurisdictions.", "B": " If the company is Portuguese, the rights only have to be registered in Portugal in order for its protection to extend worldwide.", "C": " If you only export to the European Union, community directives define that the registrations in Portugal extend throughout all the European Union territory."}
A
HOW CAN I PROTECT INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS WHEN EXPORTING?
en
{"A": "World Intellectual Property Organization ", "B": "World Intellectual Programme Organization", "C": "Worldwide Intellectual Programme Organization ", "D": "World Intelligence Property Organization"}
A
What does WIPO stand for?
en
{"A": "Trademark ", "B": "Copyright ", "C": "Patent ", "D": "Logo"}
B
Intellectual property created by artists is protected by?
en
{"A": "Muscians ", "B": "Actor ", "C": "Singers", "D": "Designers"}
D
Registered designs protect the intellectual property created by
en
{"A": "Logos ", "B": "Patents ", "C": "Copyrights ", "D": "Trademarks"}
B
The Intellectual property created by inventors is protected by?
en
{"A": "Designs only ", "B": "Logos, names and brands ", "C": "Logos only ", "D": "Names only"}
B
Trademark consist of
en
{"A": "10 years ", "B": "20 years ", "C": "5 years ", "D": "15 years"}
B
How long does a patent usually last for?
en
{"A": "20 years ", "B": "50 years ", "C": "30 years ", "D": "10 years"}
B
A copyright usually lasts for?
en
{"A": "1995", "B": "1994", "C": "1999", "D": "2004"}
A
When did the WTO came into existence?
en
{"A": "Ethics", "B": "Commercial ", "C": "Morality ", "D": "Intelligence"}
B
What type of idea and information does Intellectual Property Rights protects?
en
{"A": "2011", "B": "2014", "C": "2019", "D": "2016"}
B
When did the IPR act came into existence in UK
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
A
What protects the intellectual property created by artists?
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
D
What protects the intellectual property created by designers?
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
C
What protects the intellectual property created by inventors?
en
{"A": "BMW", "B": "Champagne", "C": "Hogwarts", "D": "Playstation", "E": "World Wide Web"}
B
Which of these is a geographical indication?
en
{"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"}
C
What does a trademark protect?
en
{"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"}
D
In most countries, how long does copyright last for?
en
{"A": "10 years", "B": "20 years", "C": "40 years", "D": "60 years"}
B
How long do patents usually last for?
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
A
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?
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
E
Imagine a footballer sets up his own company to sell his own range of clothes. What type of intellectual property can he use to show that the clothes are made by his company?
en
{"A": "copyright", "B": "geographical indications", "C": "patents", "D": "registered designs", "E": "trademarks"}
C
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?
en
{"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."}
D
When applying for a patent which of the following is not one of the three requirements of novelty?
en
{"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 colours of a sovereign country’s flag."}
A
Which of the following is an acceptable reason for refusal to register a trademark?
en
{"A": "The invention is not a patentable invention.", "B": "The patent was granted to person who was not entitled to it.", "C": "The patent applicant already has a similar patent in their name.", "D": "The patent does not disclose the invention clearly enough for it to be performed by a person skilled in the art."}
C
Which of the following is not a valid reason for revoking a registered intellectual property right?
en
{"A": "The intellectual property right was registered by someone who has since changed their name.", "B": "The intellectual property right relates to a written work registered by an author dead 70 years.", "C": "The renewal fee on the intellectual property right was not paid after the initial ten-year period had expired.", "D": "The intellectual property was never valid because the essential requirements for registration weren’t met."}
A
Which of the following is not a basis from which to challenge an intellectual property right?
en
{"A": "Berne convention", "B": "Paris convention", "C": "Munich convention", "D": "Brussels convention"}
A
Which convention states that nationals of all union countries enjoy in said countries the advantages that their respective laws grant to nationals?
en
{"A": "Handel v Lieber", "B": "McIntyre v Dunlop", "C": "Duijnstee v Goderbauer", "D": "Al Hayek v Hamed"}
C
In which of the following cases was the meaning of ‘registration or validity’ elucidated by the Court of Justice?
en
{"A": "It is illegal to take out a patent in more than one country.", "B": "Intellectual property law doesn’t apply in some European countries.", "C": "Legal action contesting the patent would have to be undertaken in each country.", "D": "Belgian patent law is notoriously complicated."}
C
What is the inevitable problem with a European patent being defined as a group of national patents?
en
{"A": "Monsanto v Johnson & Co", "B": "Napp Laboratories v Pfizer Inc", "C": "JP Morgan v Goldman Sachs", "D": "Ipcress v OPSCOM"}
B
In which case did Hoffmann hold that a petition for revocation of a patent must be served on the respondent in the same way as in a personal action?
en
{"A": "A user may have an electronic address that is designated in one country despite their physical presence in another.", "B": "An Internet Service Provider may request an address from a user but there is nothing to stop the user lying about this information.", "C": "The user may be located in international waters or airspace.", "D": "The user may actually be an algorithm that effectively mimics the decision making abilities of a real person."}
D
Which of the following is not a problem the internet presents to intellectual property law with regard to the location of the user?
en
{"A": "Copyright uses the concept of communication which becomes problematic when information is made available via the internet and then requested by another party.", "B": "Interactions that occur in cyberspace cannot be said to truly exist.", "C": "It is impossible to prove intellectual property has been shared over the internet as no records of such transactions can be recalled.", "D": "There are such a high number of transactions taking place that it is impossible to try and police them."}
A
Which of the following is a difficulty faced when applying substantive intellectual property law concepts in cases of infringement over the internet?
en
{"A": "McKinney & Bennet v Wholesale Logos", "B": "Euromarket Designs v Peters and Crate & Barrel", "C": "The Logo Warehouse v Stanley Hopkins", "D": "Tippett & Stoker v Nimbus"}
B
Which case ruled that a website displaying a trademark didn't need to register outside the country of origin despite worldwide access to the website?
en
{"A": "The Callahan Approach", "B": "The Shevill Approach", "C": "The Crane Approach", "D": "The Bryers Approach"}
A
Which of the following is an approach commonly used in cases of infringement over the internet?
en
{"A": "make her invention", "B": "commercialize her invention", "C": "publish the results of tests using the invention", "D": "keep others from making her invention", "E": "collect a monetary award from the government", "F": "1 and 2", "G": "all of the above"}
D
A patent gives the owner the right to:
en
{"A": "to encourage an inventor to disclose an invention by granting exclusive rights over the invention to the inventor.", "B": "to benefit the public by limiting the scope and term of the exclusive rights granted to an inventor.", "C": "to benefit the public through encouraging innovation by publishing a full disclosure of the technical details of the invention.", "D": "to benefit the public through guaranteeing that the inventor can commercialize his/her invention", "E": "1 and 2", "F": "1, 2 and 3", "G": "2, 3 and 4"}
F
A policy (or policies) behind the patent system is:
en
{"A": "novel", "B": "non-obvious or include an inventive step", "C": "useful or capable of industrial application", "D": "1 and 2", "E": "1 and 2 and 3"}
E
The minimum requirements for obtaining a patent are that the invention must be:
en
{"A": "could do it without major problems", "B": "would not be able to do it because the granted patent was published in the U.K.", "C": "would not be able to do it because the method is used in the U.K.", "D": "2 and 3", "E": "none of the above"}
B
An inventor was awarded a patent in the U.K. on a method for selecting transformed plants and has practiced the mentioned method only in the U.K. Six months later, another person who independently invented the same method in Australia wants to obtain a patent in Australia. She:
en
{"A": "could do it without major problems", "B": "would not be able to do it because the invented method has been used in the U.K.", "C": "could do it only if the method has not been described in a written publication anywhere in the world", "D": "1 and 3", "E": "none of the above"}
D
The method mentioned above was not patented or published anywhere but has been used in the U.K. and only in the U.K. since 1997. Another person who independently invented the same method in Australia in 2001 wants to obtain a patent in Australia. She:
en
{"A": "30 May 2021; 20 years from the grant date of the patent", "B": "1 July 2020; 20 years from the publication date of the application", "C": "1 January 2019; 20 years from the filing date of the application", "D": "some other date"}
C
A patent application is filed on 1 January 1999. The application is published 18 months later on 1 July 2000 and granted on 30 May 2001. The patent is valid until:
en
{"A": "Indonesia and its territories", "B": "Japan and its territories", "C": "All ASEAN countries", "D": "All countries that adhere to TRIPS"}
B
A patent awarded by the patent office in Japan is valid in:
en
{"A": "automatically in all countries that are members of the European Patent Office", "B": "automatically in all European countries, regardless of whether they are member", "C": "upon registration in each country that supports the European Patent Office"}
C
Assuming an applicant has indicated a desire to have a patent valid in all European countries and elects to have the application examined by the European Patent Office, a regional patent office, the patent that is ultimately granted is valid:
en
{"A": "is the result of an international application filed under the international Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)", "B": "is valid in all member countries of the PCT", "C": "is valid only in the PCT countries designated by the applicant upon filing the application", "D": "1 and 2", "E": "1 and 3", "F": "there is no such thing as an international patent"}
F
An international patent:
en
{"A": "use it freely without the need to tell you", "B": "use it, but they should tell you first", "C": "use it only if they get a license or some other form of permission from you", "D": "cannot use it at all"}
C
You have a granted patent in the United States and in Australia on using GUSPlus, a very sensitive detection system for identifying transformed plants.  A couple of colleagues of yours are working at an Australian non-profit research institute and another is working at Cornell University in the United States, and they want to use the GUSPlus system for research purposes to identify transgenic plants. They can:
en
{"A": "infringing Humongous' patent rights by growing Bt-transgenic soybeans in Argentina", "B": "infringing Humongous' patent rights by growing Bt-transgenic soybeans and saving seeds for next sowing season in Argentina", "C": "infringing Humongous' patent rights by exporting Bt-transgenic soybeans to the U.S.", "D": "none of the above"}
C
You are a farmer growing Bt-transgenic soybeans in Argentina and Humongous Company, a very large multi-national agricultural company, has a valid patent in the United States, but not in Argentina, that claims Bt-transgenic soybeans. You will be:
en
{"A": "is always a granted patent and is enforceable", "B": "is always an application for a patent and is not enforceable", "C": "is always an application for a patent and is enforceable", "D": "could be either a granted patent or a patent application"}
D
A published patent specification:
en
{"A": "always a granted patent", "B": "sometimes a granted patent", "C": "always a patent application"}
C
A PCT publication is:
en
{"A": "the title", "B": "the title and the abstract", "C": "the abstract", "D": "the detailed description of the invention and the drawings", "E": "the detailed description of the invention and the claims", "F": "the claims"}
F
If you want to know what is actually covered by a granted patent, you will look at:
en
{"A": "a glycosyltransferase from Staphylococcus", "B": "a glycosyltransferase from Haemophilus", "C": "a glycosyltransferase from Pneumococcus", "D": "1 and 3", "E": "none of the above"}
E
A published application in Brazil describes the cloning of glycosyltransferases, enzymes that transfer sugar moieties, from five different bacteria including Staphylococcus, Pneumococcus, Arthrobacter, Clavibacter, and Thermobacter, and teaches how to obtain genes encoding the same enzymes from other bacterial genera. The only claim recites: "An isolated DNA sequence encoding a glycosyltransferase isolated from Staphylococcus". You need a license before you can use DNA encoding the following in Brazil:
en
{"A": "a glycosyltransferase from Staphylococcus", "B": "a glycosyltransferase from Haemophilus", "C": "a glycosyltransferase from Pneumococcus", "D": "1 and 3", "E": "none of the above"}
A
The publication mentioned above is a Brazilian granted patent. You need a license before you can use DNA encoding the following in Brazil:
en
{"A": "in each country, the first one to file the patent application", "B": "in Canada, the first to file the patent application, and in Germany and the United States, the first to invent the invention", "C": "in Germany, the first to file the patent application, and in Canada and the United States, the first to invent the invention", "D": "in Canada and Germany, the first to file the patent application, and in the United States, the first to invent the invention", "E": "in each country, the first to invent"}
D
Two independent inventors come up with the same patentable invention and each of them decides to file a patent application in Canada, Germany and the United States. Who would get the patents?
en
{"A": "you go to jail if caught", "B": "you pay a large fine to the government", "C": "the owner of the patent will sue you in a court", "D": "nothing may happen", "E": "2 and 3 are both possible", "F": "3 and 4 are both possible"}
F
If you infringe a patent:
en
{"A": "because the invented drug fulfills the criteria for patentability, your team is awarded the patent in both jurisdictions.", "B": "because the invention was published\tbefore\tthe filing of the patent application, your team is denied a patent in both jurisdictions.", "C": "because the invention was published\twithin one year\tof the filing of the patent application, your team is allowed a patent in both jurisdictions.", "D": "because the invention was published\twithin one year\tof the filing of the patent application, your team is denied a patent in Europe, but granted in the United States"}
D
You and a couple of colleagues are the inventors of a new drug that successfully tackles stomach cancer and has few unwanted side effects. Your colleagues decide to publish the methodology used to develop the drug in a prestigious scientific journal. The article is published in January 2001 and the research results are presented in two international conferences in March 2001 with great success. In the meantime, your team realizes that it would be worthwhile obtaining a patent for the new drug. A patent specification is diligently prepared and filed in the United States and with the European Patent Office in April 2001. Which of the following scenarios is the most likely:
en
{"A": "file an opposition against the granted patent before the patent offices in both the United States and in Europe alleging lack of novelty", "B": "file an opposition against the granted patent before the United States patent office alleging lack of novelty", "C": "file an opposition against the granted patent before the European patent office alleging lack of novelty"}
C
A patent on a method to heal wounds using turmeric has been granted in both Europe and in the U.S. in January 2001. You, as a person not involved at all in the alleged invention, have written evidence proving that the method was well-known not only in the mentioned places, but also in other parts of the world. You find out about the patent in August 2001. In the present circumstances you could:
en
{"A": "for scientific information", "B": "for information on freedom to operate", "C": "to see if your idea is patentable (novel and non-obvious)", "D": "to see what your competitor is up to", "E": "2, 3, and 4", "F": "all of the above"}
F
The following is a good reason to search for patents and patent applications with the CAMBIA Patent Lens search:
en
{"A": "Yes", "B": "No", "C": "Yes with permission"}
C
Can a lecture delivered by academician be reported in a newspaper?
en
{"A": "Yes", "B": "Occasionally with conditions", "C": "No"}
A
Can lecture delivered in the classroom be copyrighted ?
en
{"A": "Yes", "B": "No", "C": "Occasionally"}
A
Can judgement or order of court be copyrighted ?
en
{"A": "Writer", "B": "Owner"}
A
Whose grant require before altering anything in the original from of a book ?
en
{"A": "who convert the ideas in to working invention", "B": "who publish their ideas first in the journals", "C": "who communicates idea to other at first", "D": "who communicates and ideas to registrar of the patent"}
B
Who is the true and first inventor ?
en
{"A": "which involves inventive steps", "B": "Product which is used for medical treatment of human beings & animals", "C": "Process of medical treatment of human beings & animals", "D": "None of these"}
C
Which of the following is not patent-able?
en
{"A": "Unregistered trademark owner", "B": "State Govt. on behalf of owner", "C": "Registered trademark owner only", "D": "Central Govt. on behalf of owner"}
C
Who can sue for infringement of trademark?
en
{"A": "Traditional knowledge", "B": "Arms", "C": "Atomic energy", "D": "Junk food"}
C
Patent for the __ is prohibited.
en
{"A": "Trademark Act", "B": "Patent Act", "C": "Geographical Indication Act", "D": "Copyright Act"}
D
A design can be also registered under __
en
{"A": "Trade Symbol", "B": "Symbol", "C": "Common Law Mark", "D": "Registered Trade Mark"}
C
An unregistered trademark is called __
en
{"A": "To encourage inventors", "B": "To encourage labour", "C": "To develop country", "D": "To encourage investors"}
A
Why patent is granted ?
en
{"A": "Title", "B": "Ideas", "C": "Interest", "D": "Goods"}
C
Assignment of patent means transfer of __ in the patent by the patent holder in favour of another.
en
{"A": "Those who are the proprietor of trademark", "B": "Proprietor of trademark and the other person who want to be a registered user hast to jointly apply.", "C": "Those who want to be a registered user"}
B
Who has to apply before registrar to be a registered user of trademark ?
en
{"A": "Surrender compulsory", "B": "Assignment", "C": "Govt. file a suit", "D": "Compulsory licence"}
D
Which of the following can be exercised by the government in the case of the non working of the panted?
en
{"A": "State Government", "B": "Central / Federal Government"}
B
Patent Act is passed by …
en
{"A": "Social relationship", "B": "Personal relationship", "C": "Contractual relationship", "D": "Fiduciary relationship"}
C
Application for patent by employee can be determined by ………….
en
{"A": "Simple Trademark", "B": "Associated Trademark", "C": "Collective Mark", "D": "Service Mark"}
C
The mark which is registered in the name of association is called …
en
{"A": "Service Mark", "B": "Additional Trademark", "C": "ality Mark", "D": "Certification Mark"}
D
The mark granted by the authority granting the certificate of quality and standard is called ………
en
{"A": "Right to exploit patent", "B": "Right to expand patent", "C": "Right not to work out patent", "D": "Right to oppose compulsory licence"}
A
Which of the following is the right conferred to the patentee ?
en
{"A": "Registrar of Copyright", "B": "Controller of Copyright"}
A
The assignment and licenses for the copyright can be registered with __
en
{"A": "Registrar", "B": "None of these", "C": "Government", "D": "Public"}
D
The purpose of filing a specification is to make available the invention to __
en
{"A": "Registered Trademark", "B": "Numerals", "C": "Symbols", "D": "Unregistered Trademark"}
D
Proprietor of which trademark shall not be entitled to institute any proceeding to prevent or to recover damages for the infringement ?
en
{"A": "Refused to assign copyright to other person", "B": "Refused to republish", "C": "Refused to pay tax to the government"}
B
If owner of copyright work ……….. the copyright board will grant compulsory licence.
en
{"A": "Proprietor of trademark", "B": "Both third party and proprietor of trademark", "C": "Third party"}
C
The registered user can institute proceedings for infringement in his own name against …
en
{"A": "process", "B": "ideas", "C": "both product and process", "D": "product"}
C
Patent can be granted for ………?