Legal Trivia Challenge – Archive Legal Trivia Challenge 7Legal Trivia Challenge 6Legal Trivia Challenge 5Legal Trivia Challenge 4 Legal Trivia Challenge 3Legal Trivia Challenge 2Legal Trivia Challenge 1 Legal Trivia Challenge 7 Welcome to the Orbis Juris legal trivia challenge! This week’s theme is Cryptocurrency. Yes, we’ve finally succumbed to crypto-madness. As always, there are five questions. You will have one minute to answer each question. Good luck! Participants with the best scores this week, and who submit their email address after the quiz, will be entered into a drawing to win cool promotional gear, such as athletic apparel, travel mugs and useful office items. The first 100 participants to sign up as a member of Orbis Juris will be entered into a separate drawing with a cash prize of $500. * * * In respect to both drawings and your participation herein: no purchase necessary to enter or win; void where prohibited; and subject to Official Rules for Drawings and Privacy Policy, which may be accessed via links in the footer below. By what means did Satoshi Nakamoto solve the Byzantine Generals Problem? According to recent statements from the SEC, a token or coin whose initial offering represents a sale of a security may subsequently not constitute a security if: Quantum key exchanges exploit discoveries by which discipline in order to secure the exchange of security keys from hacking? Which 13th century figure declared that Kublai Khan “may truly be said to possess the secret of the alchemists” on account of his ability to transform paper into currency? In respect to smart contracts, what is an oracle? Thanks for playing! No lawyer knows all of the law, and most know only a small fraction well. That’s why Orbis Juris exists. It supplements your knowledge and gives you the opportunity to supplement the knowledge of others (and, in doing so, to earn). Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions. Well Done! Three out of five is pretty dang good, particularly when one considers the enormity of the law. You should give Orbis Juris a try. You would make for a great addition. Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions. Great Job! Take a bow. Your legal acumen is impressive. Why not transform that knowledge into cash via Orbis Juris? We would love to have you. Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions. Back to Top Legal Trivia Challenge 6 Welcome to the Orbis Juris legal trivia challenge! This week’s theme is High Court Highs and Lows. As always, there are five questions. You will have one minute to answer each question. Good luck! Participants with the best scores this week, and who submit their email address after the quiz, will be entered into a drawing to win cool promotional gear, such as athletic apparel, travel mugs and useful office items. The first 100 participants to sign up as a member of Orbis Juris will be entered into a separate drawing with a cash prize of $500. * * * In respect to both drawings and your participation herein: no purchase necessary to enter or win; void where prohibited; and subject to Official Rules for Drawings and Privacy Policy, which may be accessed via links in the footer below. Which justice declared that “[t]hree generations of imbeciles are enough” in an opinion upholding a Virginia statue which permitted the sterilization of inmates deemed to be afflicted with a hereditary form of insanity or imbecility? What “material” was Justice Potter Stewart referring to when he wrote: “I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it…”? Which justice declared that “[s]unlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the most efficient policeman”? In which case did the Supreme Court direct several district courts “to take such proceedings and enter such orders and decrees consistent with this opinion as are necessary and proper to admit to public schools on a racially nondiscriminatory basis with all deliberate speed the parties to these cases”? Which justice asserted that “[a]t the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life”? Thanks for playing! No lawyer knows all of the law, and most know only a small fraction well. That’s why Orbis Juris exists. It supplements your knowledge and gives you the opportunity to supplement the knowledge of others (and, in doing so, to earn). Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions. Well Done! Three out of five is pretty dang good, particularly when one considers the enormity of the law. You should give Orbis Juris a try. You would make for a great addition. Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions. Great Job! Take a bow. Your legal acumen is impressive. Why not transform that knowledge into cash via Orbis Juris? We would love to have you. Membership is free and imposes no obligation to participate. By signing up, you simply make available to yourself an amazing resource to quickly and easily earn money and to obtain answers to difficult legal questions.