This week’s IP quiz: March 5 to March 9

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This week’s IP quiz: March 5 to March 9

Each Friday, Managing IP tests your knowledge of the week’s IP news with five questions on the week’s news. How many can you answer?

1. Which country, well known for its drinks industry, filed an amicus brief before the US Supreme Court in the Havana Club trade mark dispute?

2. Which bestselling crime author revealed this week that a copyright pirate sells a package of 19 of her scanned books for £4.99 on eBay, saying: “Nobody takes seriously that this man is selling my work and I get nothing from that”?

3. The licensing director of which toy company said the following this week? “We have an approval team of eight people. They check each page of each book; they check T-shirt designs through an online tool; and they check samples that are provided, both pre-production and post-production, before release.”

4. In its opinion in MySpace v GraphOn, The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit cited and discussed an article published in Managing IP last year. Who wrote the article?

5. What percentage of UDRP decisions at WIPO favoured the complainant in 2011, according to WIPO statistics?

Last week’s answers:

1. Hermès

2. 1,020

3. David Martin MEP

4. Accor (Novotel and Sofitel brands) and SBE Hotel Licensing (SLS Hotel in Beverly Hills)

5. Benedict Bird, formerly a partner of Linklaters

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Explosm, the independent Texas studio behind the hit webcomic Cyanide & Happiness, partnered with Temu’s IP protection team to combat counterfeiters infringing on its brand
The latest in a dispute over juicing machines, and a shakeup in judicial compositions were also among the top developments
Patent partner Robert Hollingshead explains why the firm remains committed to Japan despite several US firms exiting the Japanese and greater Asia market
Emma Green, partner at Bird & Bird, shares why the Iceland v Iceland dispute could prompt businesses and lawyers to think differently about brand enforcement
Attain IP, developed by two UK patent lawyers, will meet ‘forensic’ needs of patent attorneys by showing a verifiable reasoning chain, according to its co-founders
The High Court of Australia has allowed a fashion designer to retain her registered ‘Katie Perry’ trademark for clothing
Sim & San secured the win for Dr. Reddy’s, which will allow the pharma company to manufacture and export semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic
Lucas Amodio joins our ‘Five minutes with’ series to discuss artificial intelligence systems and patent law
The Americas research cycle has commenced, so don't miss the opportunity to submit your work
Practitioners have welcomed extended funding of the specialist police unit until 2029, while the UKIPO says it is exploring increased scale
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