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Most of John Philip Sousa's music was published before 1923 and the U.S. copyright has expired, so no license is needed.For performances: If you select works that were done later, assuming they are still copyrighted, you will need to notify the Copyright Office of your performance and the number of copies made, so they can bill you for the mandatory license fees.For other uses of works still copyrighted, see a copyright attorney.
Altering a copyrighted painting to teach a technique is still copyright infringement as that falls under derivative works.
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Yes, Edwin Landseer's works are copyrighted. He assigned the rights to his works to others prior to his death, and these people and their heirs have maintained the copyrights on his works.
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Unless specifically from public domain works, anything and everything on YouTube is copyrighted.
Three examples of a Copyright are Literacy works, Musical works, & Dramatic works.Three examples of a NON-Copyright are Titles&Names, Ideas, & Fashion.
Yes; plagiarism is passing off someone else's work as your own, which would include works in the public domain.
The word? No. The band and the candy have multiple trademark registrations, and there are literally millions of copyrighted works with "kiss" in the title.
Works for which protection has expired are in the public domain. In the US, works of the federal government are not protected.
Yes; they will be protected through 2020.
To use others' copyrighted works, you need an exemption in the law (such as fair use) or permission from the copyright holder.