Yes. Copyright protection would start from the date of creation.
A Picture of Her Tombstone was created in 1996.
A Picture of Her Tombstone has 234 pages.
The ISBN of A Picture of Her Tombstone is 0-3121-4390-7.
The picture itself is protected by copyright; downloading it without permission would be copyright infringement.
A picture of Mario eating curry
no that is a sick question
Dozens, if not hundreds. Every time you create something new, it is automatically protected by copyright. Doodle a picture of a cat, you have copyright. Take a picture with your phone, you have copyright. Record yourself making up a song, you have copyright.
It might be because of copyright violations. The image might be subject to copyright. You have to use your image only as the profile picture.
The copyright status of a guardian angel picture depends on who created it and when it was made. Generally, artworks remain protected under copyright law for the creator's life plus 70 years. If the picture is in the public domain, it means that its copyright has expired or the creator has waived their rights, allowing anyone to use it freely. It is best to research the specific picture's copyright status to determine if it is in the public domain.
'You' as an individual cannot, although it is possible that the photographer who took the picture may have.
The first film with a US copyright is "Fred Ott's Sneeze" or "Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze," a five-second motion picture from 1894. It was submitted to the copyright office as a sheet of still images.
I would assume Richard O'Brien still holds the copyright.