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Without a license, yes.
No; this would be considered public performance, which requires a license.
If you have a performance license, no. If you are recording it and have a mechanical license, no. If you are posting it to YouTube and have a synchronization license and a performance license, no. If you are doing any of these things without a license, yes.
Copyright infringement in general is copying, altering, or distributing protected material without the permission of the copyright holder. If you have a software license to put a program on one computer and you put it on two, you have infringed the copyright. More details can be found in the End User Licensing Agreement (EULA) of the program.
The reproduction or use of someone else's copyright material without permission or license.Copyright infringement is the unauthorized or prohibited use of works under copyright, infringing the copyright holder's exclusive rights, such as the right to reproduce or perform the copyrighted work, or to make derivative works.
Without a license, it would be infringing to create the play, and to perform it.
That is a description of copyright infringement.
No.
Without a license, yes. That is assuming you did not personally compose, perform and record the song yourself, or take a public domain composition and perform and record it yourself, either of which would mean you own the copyright on those recordings and it would not be copyright infringement to use the recording of the song any way you like.
Innocent infringement is a violation of copyright without willful intent. Accidentally moving an mp3 onto a shared drive would be innocent infringement.
Using a logo without permission would be trademarkinfringement.
The picture itself is protected by copyright; downloading it without permission would be copyright infringement.