The two major purposes for any trademark statute are to
A. (1) protect the investment of energy, time, and money that the owner of a trademark has invested in the development of the product and (2) guarantee the owner of the trademark complete rights to his work for the duration of the owner's lifetime.
B. (1) protect the firm selling the trademarked product and (2) protect the consumer buying the product.
C. (1) protect the public so they will get the product it wants and asks for and (2) protect the government so it will be able to collect its fair share of taxes from the revenues generated.
D. (1) protect the inventor's individual rights and (2) provide the company with the maximum profits possible.
E. protect the rights of the inventor both here and abroad.
Answer: B
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Which of the following is a drawback of the task-analysis inventory?
A. The information generated by this method is very vague and imprecise. B. It is difficult to make comparisons across job families using a single task inventory. C. The task-analysis inventory is complex and relatively difficult to use. D. Training needs cannot be established using this method.
Which of the following is most likely to change in the next ten years?
A. competitive advantage mechanism B. pace of integration of new technology C. principles of competitive advantage D. model of business strategy E. relationship between competitive advantage and information systems
The fixed-period inventory model can have a stockout during the review period as well as during the lead time, which is why fixed-period systems require more safety stock than fixed-quantity systems
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
Hill told Tompkins, "Sell Martin a suit of clothes, and charge it to me." Tompkins sold the suit to Martin and sent the bill to Hill. Hill refused to pay, pleading the statute of frauds as his defense. Is Hill liable?