A disclaimer is a legal statement that serves to limit liability or clarify information in various contexts. It is an important tool used by businesses and individuals to protect themselves from potential legal issues.
It's unlikely that a disclaimer or other boilerplate could be protected, because one of the requirements for protection is originality or creativity.
A summary generally wouldn't require any kind of disclaimer. As long as you're not quoting heavily from the original material, you wouldn't be even close to infringing.If you are quoting heavily, the only disclaimer that might help would be one saying that you are quoting by permission of the copyright holder. But that will only help if you really dohave the permission of the copyright holder.
It basically means "we don't know/care who the copyright holder is so use it at your own risk". And no, that disclaimer does not exempt someone from prosecution for infringement.
Yes; virtually anything you encounter online is protected unless you can prove otherwise, and just in case, Walmart has included a copyright notice at the bottom of every page. For further details, see the intellectual property disclaimer linked below.
No, you do no have to indicate the Trademarks held by Apple (iPad, iTunes, etc.), but you cannot put commercial music in the background or show copyrighted movies on the screen of the iPad during the presentation. If you create the video yourself, you cannot copyright it beyond the standard YouTube license or Creative Commons licenses. This is a condition of service with YouTube.
If the book is simply trying to piggyback on the success of the company, yes. But if the book is a critique of the company, no. Generally the publisher will include a disclaimer in the copyright notification of the book, clarifying the ownership of "all related indicia."
"Copyright in fragment" is a common misspelling of "copyright infringement," which is the violation of copyright.
Security policy usually is imposed for the protection of an entitiy, organization or a company. This policies may range from copyright protection to disclaimer or waivers. This serves as safety net to any damage or abuse that may occur in the future which directly or indirectly affects a entity, organization or a company.
If you are writing a story piece then: Disclaimer: All publicly recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their respective owners. The original characters and plot are the property of the author. The author is in no way associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media franchise. No copyright infringement is intended.
license agreement
"A copyright attorney provides legal counsel regarding copyright law. A copyright attorney could be an asset in assisting a client obtain and registering a copyright, transfering ownership of a copyright, helping avoid copyright violations, and protecting the client's own copyright. Although any attorney may counsel regarding copyright law, copyright attorneys can be a great asset where specific copyright issues are addressed."
Not necessarily, if you do not get permission from Nintendo or Shigeru Miyamoto, then you will trigger an event called a copyright infringement, and pay from a range of $200 to $150,000, go to jail, or both. If you get permission, then you can publish the book. Or, to avoid all of that, you can write the story on www (dot) Fanfiction (dot) net, but you must put a disclaimer (Something that says you do not own something) on every chapter, which must be visible directly after loading the page.P.S. It is not plagiarism, it is an infringement of copyright.