No. Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. In some cases however they may be registered as trademarks.
It depends which side of the equation you're on: someone making money from copyright, or someone paying for a license.
If someone is no stranger to allegations of copyright infringement, it means he gets accused of copyright infringement a lot.
Plagiarism is when someone uses someone else's work without giving credit, while copyright infringement is when someone uses someone else's work without permission.
Someone receives copyright protection for their work as soon as it is created and fixed in a tangible form, such as writing it down or recording it.
Copyright someone elses design
That phrase could mean several things. It could refer to a letter that is protected by copyright, or a letter allowing use of someone's copyright (i.e., a license).
Granting copyright generally means licensing it to someone else, for free: I grant you the right to put this image on t-shirts. It is not a transfer of copyright.
Certain things on the Internet are copyright. This is because it is someone work/ creation and is therefore illegal to use this persons work with out acknowledgement of the creator. Anything which says copyright ( such as artists songs) are copyright.
Unless the job is work for hire or work for employer the photographer holds the copyright.
Currently, action is being taken against TorrentFreak for copyright infringement.
Yes. Copyright infringement of any form is a violation of federal law.
On the internet .You can send it to your desktop and save it considering copyright doesn't prevent it