No, but there are caveats within the law that allow your homework to be completed anyway. See the link below for details.
for your sentence time in jail for breaking the copyright law, you may get 89 years!
The smurfs ate my mother in law
Apple has taken every precaution to ensure that you cannot use iTunes to infringe on copyright.
Much of the copyright law consists of exceptions which allow certain limited unlicensed uses, but there is no clear line defining, for example, how much is too much to copy. So while a teacher compiling clips from a feature film for educational purposes is technically allowed to break DRM, the technology that enables that also happens to enable illegal unlicensed uses.
Copying, altering, distributing, or performing/displaying a work for which you are not the copyright holder, and for which you do not have permission from the rightsholder or an exemption in the law, is a violation of copyright laws.
Not if you own the VHS copy and are copying it for personal use. By law you are allowed to make a "back up" copy. As long as you are not making multiple copies and distributing them there is no infringement.
Only copy, alter, distribute, or perform/display materials which are their original work, are in the public domain, or for which they have permission from the copyright holder or an exemption in the law.
There is no law prohibiting it. However, it would never happen.
By copying, altering, distributing, performing, or displaying works for which you have neither permission from the rightsholder nor an exemption in the law.
Copying, altering, distributing, or performing/displaying a work without permission of the rightsholder is an infringement of copyright law. In the US, infringement is punishable by fines up to $30,000.
Fortunately or unfortunately, copyright law isn't as black-and-white as that. If the design is protected by copyright, then only the copyright holder can copy it or authorize others to do so. Some copying is allowed by limitations, defenses, and exceptions in the copyright law itself. And the design may not even be protected in the first place, if the term has expired. So yes, copyright law means I can't put a Picasso on a t-shirt and sell it without a license. But I can take a photo of it or attempt to recreate it in my art class.
'p' inside a circle means 'protected by copyright law' and you are not allowed to reproduce it without permission from the author