SDO 559: Trademark Law

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Assuming the statements are false, which of the following are examples of actionable false advertising:

"We serve the best coffee in town." "Come buy the softest mattress you will ever feel." "The first person to buy our new variety of cheddar cheese gets a free trip to the moon." *None of the above*

Which of the following forms of confusion are recognized under the law?

Actual, initial interest, post-sale, and reverse confusion

Which of the following trademark application types require proof of actual use prior to issuance of the trademark registration?

Both Section (a)(1) and (a)(2) Applications

A federal trademark registration operates as constructive use throughout the U.S. and gives the registrant the right to enjoin a subsequent user from using the trademark even if the registrant is not likely to expand into the later user's geographic area.

False

A mark that is regionally well-known in the U.S. can be a famous mark.

False

A person's name is not permitted to become an enforceable trademark against others having the same last name who wish to use the last name for their business.

False

A trademark owner who polices uses of the mark cannot be deemed to have lost rights in the mark due to genericness.

False

All nominative and descriptive uses are defenses to dilution claims.

False

An earlier-filed "Intent-to-Use" Application (App 1) that later issues as a registration would have priority over a later filed "Actual Use" Application (App 2).

False

An individual consumer who identifies a materially false and misleading advertisement typically has standing to sue the company guilty of the false advertising.

False

Applying the mark "Mercedes" to furniture is an example of dilution by tarnishment.

False

Dilution by blurring occurs in a situation where someone associates a famous trademark with drug paraphernalia.

False

Generic Marks that have been shown to have acquired secondary meaning are registerable on the Principal Register.

False

Geographic terms such as city names are not permitted to become enforceable trademarks against others who wish to also use the geographic term for their business.

False

If you have a federally registered trademark, Twitter is required to give you the matching account name.

False

In a confusion analysis, it is impermissible to subdivide a mark into components to identify a dominant portion, such as "Mc" in "McMuffin."

False

Inherently distinctive marks (such as newly made-up words) are not subject to opposition during the USPTO examination process.

False

Owners of unregistered trademarks are not permitted to sue in Federal courts.

False

Registering an online domain name (but not creating a webpage) that includes the mark and forming an LLC that includes the mark (but not conducting any business operations using the LLC) would satisfy the requirement for the mark to be used in commerce and therefore be actual use.

False

The Lanham Act provides for contributory infringement where one party intentionally induces the infringement of another.

False

The existence of an unexpired patent related to the product supports a finding of non-functionality.

False

The intellectual property clause of the U.S. Constitution grants Congress the power to write laws covering patents, copyrights, and trademarks.

False

The maximum duration for an enforceable trademark is 40 years.

False

To be deemed a "famous" mark, the mark must be federally registered.

False

To obtain trademark rights in a suggestive mark, the mark user must show secondary meaning.

False

When the PTO evaluates a new trademark application, it uses a narrower view of confusion compared to a court that is adjudicating a trademark infringement case.

False

Which of the following are not able to obtain legal rights as a mark or trademark?

Generic Words

Which of the following would not be considered cybersquatting?

Registering a domain name and spending a month planning and designing webpage content before making the site go live.

Which is not actually a source of trademark law?

The Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP)

Which of the following could not acquire trademark rights?

The shape of a traffic sign

Which of the following would be relevant in a confusion analysis?

The spelling of the marks, the font or design of the marks, and the amount of money spent by the trademark owner promoting the mark

Which of the following are not available remedies for counterfeiting?

These are all available remedies for counterfeiting: Incarceration of the counterfeiter, seizure of the counterfeit goods, and statutory damages of up to $2,000,000 per goods sold, and attorney fees

A mark that has reached incontestable status is presumed to be a "strong" mark.

True

A principal policy of Trademark Law is to protect consumers from confusion when such consumers seek to purchase a product from a particular company.

True

A single product, such as a new board game, is permitted to be the subject of a patent, a copyright, and a trademark.

True

A trademark owner that intends to abandon its mark can have the mark deemed to be abandoned within two weeks of discontinued use of the mark.

True

Actual use in commerce is a requirement for establishing rights in an unregistered mark.

True

Any attorney licensed to practice law in the U.S. can practice trademark law at the USPTO.

True

Assessing the "strength" of a mark includes considering both the distinctiveness of the mark itself as well as the market strength relating to the degree of consumer recognition.

True

Fraudulent procurement of a trademark can arise if the applicant makes a statement to the USPTO that the applicant knew was false.

True

Genericness is determined at the time the accused infringer entered the market using the accused infringing mark.

True

If no evidence of actual confusion is submitted, a court would likely determine that the "actual confusion" factor weighed in favor of the accused infringer rather than in favor of the trademark owner.

True

In a case involving unregistered trademarks, a junior user is permitted to enjoin a senior user from use of the trademark in the junior user's area of operation.

True

In a dilution analysis, fame is determined at the time when the defendant first adopted and began use of the mark, not when the plaintiff filed suit.

True

In making a cybersquatting claim under the ACPA, both an in personam action (suing the cybersquatter) and an in rem action (suing the domain name itself) are possible.

True

In the Chewy Vuitton case, the defendant was not guilty of trademark infringement because "Chewy Vuiton" was being used as a parody of Louis Vuitton.

True

In the context of a trademark dispute, a court can require one trademark owner to modify how they use the mark to include a disclaimer that the trademark owner is not associated with a different trademark owner.

True

It is more difficult to "use" a mark in commerce for purposes of establishing your own trademark rights than it is to "use" a mark in commerce to infringe another's trademark rights.

True

Marks registered on either the Principal or the Supplemental Register can use the ® symbol.

True

Marks registered on the Principal Register can attain a legal status of "incontestable."

True

Modern right of publicity claims are brought under state laws within a state that recognizes the right of publicity.

True

One difference between nominative fair use and descriptive fair use is that with nominative fair use, you refer to the mark owner's goods/services whereas with descriptive fair use, you refer to your own goods/services.

True

One way in which trademarks differ from patents is that the public may freely use the trademark (e.g., in conversations) to refer to the products or services to which the trademark applies.

True

Owners of unregistered trademarks can sue unauthorized users for false designation of origin.

True

The Supreme Court's Dastar decision differentiated between the producer of tangible items sold compared to the creator of the idea or concept embodied in the tangible item.

True

The issue of trademark functionality tends to be most prevalent in trade dress cases.

True

The shape of an automobile body could be determined to be non-functional for trademark purposes.

True

Under the TRIPS treaty, a likelihood of confusion is presumed whenever the mark and the goods are both identical.

True

Under the UDRP, mere registration of a domain name without actively using that domain for a website is sufficient to show bad faith use.

True

Unless they pertain to a specific exclusion (such as deceptiveness, use without permission, or a president's name while still alive), surnames that have been shown to have acquired secondary meaning are, in general, registerable on the Principal Register.

True


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