Yes, to the extent that the question displays originality and creativity.
it is a question that is about fact. "Where did the story take place?" is a factual question. "How did you like the story?" would not be a factual question.
What chapter do we need to read?
It is important to understand the definition to words and word phrases. Factual matter is a question or problem that can be solved.?æ
Obviously, Jamil's question
Stop posting homework questions, this is an opinion question, not a factual question.
Straight factual information may not be protected by copyright at all; the expression is protected. Just as when using research from physical sources like books and magazines, summarizing or rewording the material is not infringing, but direct quotes need to be properly cited. (This is less of a copyright issue and more of a plagiarism issue.)If what you want to use from the internet is more creative than factual, you just need an exemption in the law or permission from the rightsholder.
It is a 'closed question' where it can turn to a "leading question" depending on your response. First, it is an inquiry as he is asking for an information, second whether it is factual or not, still depends on the response. But in its simplest form, this is just a "closed question" that can be answered with red, yellow, blues, and etc.
This is a question highly dependant upon the country in which you wish to have a copyright protection. You need to check the schedules attached to the law dealing with copyright.
in my opinion Tolkein invented great fantasy, but there is no factual answer to this question
there is no best answer for your question but there is ni copyright as long as i now sorry if i didnt answer your question...... please click yes
It protects all of the copyrightable content: creative works, such as the particular selection and arrangement of the definitions, but not the words or definitions themselves. So you can't photocopy the dictionary, but you could (in theory) transcribe the factual information, none of which is covered by copyright (in the USA).
Under US laws, all copyright claims under federal copyright must be made in US district court. You would sue for a declaratory judgment that the work did not meet the federal criteria for an enforceable copyright, once you have standing to sue (i.e., someone has threatened to sue you for copyright infringement of an invalid copyright).