No; as a corporate work, it will be protected for 95 years.
Most if not all people whose copyrights have expired are dead. I recommend they be left alone.
There is no central repository or list for works on which copyright protection has expired.
The copyrights on Jane Austen's work have long since expired.
The music to Greensleeves does not have a copyright, it has long since expired, and it was written before copyrights were even conceived. However, recordings of Greensleeves do have copyrights, so it is illegal to use those without permission.
Since everything was published prior to 1923, the copyrights had expired and, the books have fallen into the public domain.
No. Copyrights to pieces of the kernel belong to the programmers who made them. While Microsoft does ironically have a copyright on a couple of the modules, it does not own all of the code.
John Newton died in 1807. Any copyrights he may have had expired long ago.
Yes however now it has expired so you have to by the full version
Everything published in the United States before 1923. Everything copyrighted in the United States before 1951 where the work required copyright renewal before 1978 and the copyright was not renewed.
3DO sold all its rights to rivals such as Ubisoft, Microsoft, Crave, and Namco.
Answer--Microsoft Word help and tips for Word 97 through Word 2007. Using the spellchecker, autocorrect, keyboard shortcuts, styles, managing documents, inserting symbols such as copyrights, and more information visit www.iyogi.net or http://support.microsoft.com/
Heavens no! Microsoft is actually a pretty vocal opponent to Linux adoption, as it seriously threatens their market share. The Linux trademark is own by its creator, Linus Torvalds, and the Linux kernel itself is under dozens, if not hundreds, of copyrights to hundreds of holders.