For the most part, copyright does not affect searches or search results. However, those results may include materials behind pay walls, particularly when your sources are academic journals.
Occasionally, a rightsholder will decide that the snapshot views aggregated by a search engine (thumbnail versions of images, or the first sentence of an article) constitute infringement, but these cases rarely fall in their favor.
it dose not actully where did you hear that
You can only use content for which you are the copyright owner, is in the public domain, or you have permission from the copyright holder or an exemption in the law. But your resulting web page is automatically protected by copyright as soon as you create it.
There is no minimum age on copyright; works that children create are automatically protected as soon as they are fixed in a tangible medium.
i have no idea,i was searching the samething
You may only use images that are your own original work, in the public domain, or for which you have a license from the copyright holder.
For the most part, the average paramedic is not going to be affected by copyright in his work. A general understanding of copyright is more or less required to be a member of society these days, however.
Yes, editing an image can affect its copyright status. If the edits are substantial and original enough to create a new work, the edited image may be considered a derivative work and have its own copyright protection. However, if the edits are minor and do not significantly change the original image, the copyright status may remain the same.
Yes, editing a photo can affect its copyright status. If the edits are substantial and original enough to create a new work, the edited photo may be considered a derivative work with its own copyright. However, if the edits are minor and do not significantly change the original photo, the copyright status may remain with the original creator.
Copyright protected or trademark images, such as cartoon characters, require licenses from their owners.
because they want to
In the US, works created before 1923 are in the public domain. Unfortunately there is no reasonable way of determining the copyright status of works 1923-1963 without searching the paper records at the Copyright Office.
US works prior to 1923 are in the public domain, and works 1923-1963 are in the public domain if they were not renewed. Unfortunately, it is more or less impossible to determine whether copyright was renewed without searching the paper records of the Copyright Office.