It varies from country to country. Most members of the World Trade Organization protect works (regardless of publication status) for the life of the creator plus 50 years; the US and some other countries have extended this to life plus 70 years.
It varies from country to country, but all members of the World Trade Organization are required to protect images for a minimum of 50 years after the death of the creator; the US and several other countries have extended this to 70 years after death.
In the United States, copyright protection generally lasts for 70 years past the death of the original author.
Works are protected for the life of the creator plus 50 years in most countries (the US has extended this to 70 years).
95 years from creation.
Under USA laws: 95 years for a corporate owner or an employer. Life+70 Years if the magazine is owned by an individual who did the work not as a work for hire. Note that copyright of images or articles within the magazine could have much longer individual copyrights of their own, such as those done by individuals where they live another 50 years and copyright last another 70 years after that.
Copyright term for software in India is 60 years from the date of publication.
There are very few guidelines for including animated images in a website. One can include whatever they believe would be a good fit for the website. As long as the animation works, it is good.
They have spent time and money finding the images and getting them into a useable format for computers. This is what you pay for and most likely DOVER has copyrights on the digitized art work, not the original.
Generally, at least under US Law, copyright protection extends 70 years past the death ot the author/creator of the work.
In Australia, protection exists for the life of the creator plus 70 years.
In the United States, the copyright protection for a magazine title typically lasts as long as the magazine is actively being published. Once a magazine ceases publication, the copyright protection for its title may no longer apply.
I not for sure but as long as you drew it and made it you should be fine as long as you give them credit but I am not for sure
Start by trying to determine the date, who was the photographer (or photographer's employer), and whether the photograph was ever published. Then see the related question, "How long does a copyright last?"
Until 2005, works were protected for the life of the creator plus 50 years. This was extended to life plus 70 years, but copyright was not revived on works that were already in the public domain.
A timeline in animation is for how long you want photos, frames and videos to be played simultaneously.