With permission from the copyright holder, yes.
Owning an image or the copyright to an image are the same thing. When you hold the copyright to an image it is yours to do with whatever you will, and you can decide who has permission to use it or not. There is no difference.
To determine if a picture is copyrighted, look for a copyright symbol (), the word "copyright," or the abbreviation "Copr." along with the year and the name of the copyright owner. You can also check the website where you found the image for any usage restrictions or contact the creator directly for permission to use the image.
The images in Monopoly are copyright, which means you will need legal permission from the games copyright holders to publish the image.
To copyright an image or logo, you can register it with the U.S. Copyright Office. This involves submitting an application, a fee, and a copy of the image or logo. Once registered, you have legal protection against unauthorized use or reproduction.
Yes, you can copyright an image to protect it from unauthorized use. This means that the creator of the image has exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and display the image, and can take legal action against anyone who uses it without permission.
No. If you wish to use images from a site that belong to the site's owner (original photographs etc) you may ask for permission from them. They may require you to include a copyright notice under the image. Otherwise, you must purchase your own images from a photographer, designer, stock photography website, etc. or take them yourself.
Contact the copyright holder in writing to request permission; be specific about your proposed usage.
If you are altering someone else's image, you need their permission.
To copyright an image, you can simply create it and it is automatically protected under copyright law. However, to have legal proof of ownership, you can register the image with the U.S. Copyright Office by submitting an application and a copy of the image.
It might be because of copyright violations. The image might be subject to copyright. You have to use your image only as the profile picture.
No. If the Image comes from google you must get a release from them to use that image. However, most images on google are just the result of a search so that image belongs to the site they found the image on. Either way you must have a written release for that image from the website that has the rights to it. If you do not have a written release for the image you can be sued for violating the copyright.
That depends on the website where the image was pulled from.