no you will go to prison
you can use HTML to program a song into your website.
When you're viewing a picture on a webpage, right click and go to "Set As Background".
Assuming that you mean Background music and not literally as the background image then yes and no. The song should be either free from copyrights, or you need permission. In some cases you can play 30 seconds of a song before you breach copyrights however this is not exclusive to all music.
Generally, nothing. The default background colour set by a web browser is usually white. However, if you want to explicitly set the background colour as white, a simple solution is to enter style="background-color:white" to the body tag of your web page.Example:
What song was dr.dre playing in the background on it set it off movie as blacksam?
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so that is coool
Add the HTML tag to the body of your webpage where you want it to be displayed:adding height="100" and width="100" (in an example 100x100px image) is recommended, but not required.Note: the image will have to be on the internet if you want it to be seen by anyone who has the page. Websites like flickr or tinypic will host your images for free.Also, with CSS you can set background-image:url('path/to/image.jpg'); to set the background image of an element.
Making a background on a webpage in HTML is deprecated; you are advised to use CSS instead. However, if you must use HTML and only HTML, then place the "background" attribute in the body tag of the document in question like so: <body background="http://www.example.com/picture.jpg">
Never heard of unissis. Do you have a webpage or complete description?
Its Ecuador, its original, its the first song with that background.
Try checking the order of your layers.