Yes, in theory, as long as the questions, or at least their ordering and selection, have some "creative" aspect that is your own inspired contribution to the world.
On the other hand, if it's just an ordinary compilation of questions written by others, placed in numerical order, or alphabetized, or sorted by length, then it may not meet even this low threshold for copyright.
Questions about vandalism and spam and copyright and sexual themes
"Copyright" or the copyright symbol in a notification is a reference to a set of laws (in the US, Title 17) protecting the rights of the creator of a work.
We can not reproduce answer keys because of copyright.
WikiAnswers cannot give answers to lists of published questions for reasons of copyright. You can however ask your questions individually as separate questions.
The New Century Dictionary with a copyright of 1944 comes in a 2-volume set. The 2-set volume is worth close to $40.
Simple facts cannot be protected, but the expression of them can.
No. You hold a copyright for anything that you have created. You do not have to register to have a copyright on material. You must properly mark the item with the copyright symbol or the words Copyright, the name of the copyright holder and the year it went into effect. This sounds accurate. Especially though as laws change the copyright aspect may change. It really helps to go to a legal forum that will better answer is it illegal to questions. This one may help http://www.isitlegalto.com and you may ask other is it illegal to questions. Hope this helps!
Yes. In the United States the Copyright Office provides a "hotline" number at the bottom of each page on their site (see related link below).
The question is rather vague... Ann Landers was employed by a newspaper, which would normally own the copyright in her column. This would cover her written answers and the selection of questions from readers. (In other words, it would be a copyright violation for someone else to take the questions from Ann Landers' columns and publish them with new answers.)
We don't answer questions from materials protected by copyright.
The copyright to Mein Kampf is owned by the Free State of Bavaria, as the book's copyright was transferred to the state of Bavaria after World War II. The copyright is set to expire in 2025, at which point the book will enter the public domain.
There is no official copyright registration system in the UK. Copyright protection, just as in the US, is automatic. All you need is a work of sufficient originality fixed in a tangible medium.If you do have questions there is an Intellectual Property Office in the UK (see link below) and hey do have an extensive section on copyright.