The image is still owned by and under copyright by the original creator of the photographer who created the ORIGINAL image.
Taking a photo of someone else's photo does not transfer the copyright to you (the iPhone owner).
Yes. There is no minimum age for copyright protection, and the images are automatically protected as soon as they are taken.
Any designs or images you paint must be your own original work, based on public domain images, or properly licensed. But the original images you paint are automatically protected by copyright for the rest of your life and then some.
It is an image that has been put as copyright. This means others may not use this image without permission, or legal action can be taken.
Copyright protects texts, images, and the website itself.
Public domain images have no copyright restrictions.Creative Commons images are protected by copyright, but have extremely broad licenses.
The copyright law of the country in which it was created would apply.
No. In fact, the opposite is true. Most of the images you will find on Google® ARE protected by copyright which belongs to their respective owners.
There are dozens of websites that offer thousands of copyright free images that you can take. Some of these websites are, SXC, MorgueFile, FirstGov, StolkVault, and PicDrome.
Materials are not required to have a notification on them in order to be protected.
Yes. All aspects of the film are still under copyright.
Images in the public domain, such as NASA imagery, would be copyright-free. People often use "copyright-free" to describe the millions of images on Flickr that carry Creative Commons licenses, but this is technically incorrect. The images are still protected by copyright, they simply have extraordinarily broad licenses that allow many uses without further permission.
No, the images and text are in the public domain.