Short phrases cannot be protected by copyright. It is, however, a registered trademark of auto parts company Trustar.
Yes, You can CopyRight a domain name for Free.... Just type "CopyRight a Name for Free" at the top of the page.... Choose wisely!
You can't copyright a name. "Where's Waldo?" however, is copyright!
You cannot copyright a business name, but you can register it as a trademark.
A copyright is granted to the person that created it. A user name is not considered a proper identification of a person. You will have to use your legal name to register the copyright.
No. A name is a trademark as in a business . Copyright is a protection of written material. Your name is not written material.
Names, titles, logos, slogans, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. You can however copyright a graphical or audio expression of that name provided it meets the criteria for copyright.
Three things are needed: # The copyright symbol or the word Copyrighted # The name of the copyright holder, usually your name, but could be an organization of company # The year the copyright begins.
The copyright designs and patents Act 1988. :)
Copyright law is a subset of Intellectual Property (IP) law.
Heinz does not have copyright on the word Heinz, but it does have a trademark on the name.
There are 24 different copyright-protected items by that name.
Same as copyright notice for anything else: Copyright, or copr. or circle-C, the date of copyright and the author or other copyright owner's name. E.g., "Copyright 2012 Walt Disney Productions, Inc."