Without a license, yes.
Nike has an email hotline for this: counterfeit@nike.com
Particularly when money is changing hands, it is important for both buyer and seller that the merchandise be properly licensed. Unlicensed materials such as bootleg DVDs are copyright infringement, and large-scale operations are often prosecuted under criminal law. Selling knock-off products is both trademark infringement and potentially consumer fraud.
Bringing a video camera into a movie theater, and selling or uploading the resulting video is an example of copyright infringement.
Yes, selling a solutions manual for a textbook can be considered copyright infringement and is illegal without permission from the copyright holder. It's important to respect intellectual property rights and not profit from someone else's work without permission.
No; this should be covered by the "first sale doctrine." It would be infringing to scan a given page and print thousands of them to wrap a product, and it may be a trademark issue if the page in question includes a soap ad that could be considered misleading.
Distributing stolen property among other things
Many of the websites offering free blackberry ringtones are scams. They simply want to obtain people's phone numbers for selling to telemarketers. So it is unclear how many "real" free blackberry ringtones exist.
If what you're offering to sell on eBay (or anywhere else) is an unlawfully made copy of copyrighted materials, then offering to sell it is an infringement of the copyright owner's exclusive right to sell copies to the public. The so-called "first sale doctrine" (e.g., in the USA, 17 USC 109) does not apply to illegal copies.
It is if you're using brand logos. It's trademark infringement.
it depends what one and it will say or if it doesnt contact the people that are selling it to you but generaly no you dont
I'm not an attorney, but I did some reading on this a couple of years ago. If you are making a home-made video for your own entertainment and the entertainment of YouTube users, and you are not selling the video or promoting your store, etc. It seems there is no infringement of copyright. You have to wear something. Copyright law can be very complex (especially with readily accessible internet materials) but often (not always) the problem with copyright is when you are actually making money by using objects or intellectual property without permission. It is different with things like musical performances of copyrighted music, or clips of movies, etc. that people are rightly expecting to be paid for when transmitted. You might think it's harmless to put them on YouTube, but the owners of the rights may have another view. Intellectual property is property, and its owners have a right to payment when people obtain it. You should check with an attorney if this approach is not satisfying to you, or if it does not cover your situation.
yes it can be, look at the copyright page.