Yes
Yes. See the link below for more information.
Photographs are automatically protected by copyright, and notification is not required. Imprints such as the studio name are simply helpful in tracing ownership.
If you mean copied, yes, although you may be on the wrong side of copyrighted ownership. If you mean shot, I would not recommend it unless you have a permit for the gun valid for the location of the shooting.
Copyright protects original works of authorship including literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic works. It can include poetry, novels, photographs, drawings, movies, songs, computer software, and architecture.
Step 1: Contact a lawyer to get the photos copyrighted and establish your intellectual property rights. Step 2: Seek a court ordered injunction on the person. Step 3: File a lawsuit and sue for damages.
Tiffany & Co likely holds some rights for the design of the trophy itself, but photographs of the trophy would be protected as well, with rights assigned to the photographer unless other agreements were made.
Only if the copyright is not part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication of the author's registration. But If the copyright is part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication then the copyrighted author of which publicized the copyrighted registration is not copyrighted in the legalized sense of which a publication is copyrighted. Yes, a work is always copyrighted, before and after editing and both versions.
Yes, Minecraft is copyrighted.
Tech Soup and Tech Journalism are two websites that can help one discover what images are copyrighted and what images may be reused. Most historical photographs are typically open to be used freely.
Yes Times is copyrighted
no brain-freeze is not copyrighted
RIMM is copyrighted.