Deliberately bypassing technology put in place to protect copyrighted material is illegal under terms of Section 1201 (Circumvention of copyright protection systems) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
"(a) VIOLATIONS REGARDING CIRCUMVENTION OF TECHNOLOGICAL MEASURES- (1)(A) No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title"
Additionally if WikiAnswers were to provide you with information which would allow copyright to be bypassed, there is the possibility of a charge of contributory infringement. In Felton v RIAA: Corley v. Universal the mere posting of a link to a computer program that can be used to circumvent technical protection measures was held to be a violation of the DMCA. [Universal v. Corley (2d Ciruit cite)]
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Each program has its own copyright information.
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Assuming that it qualifies for protection, copyright applies as soon as the program is finished and the file is saved.
In freeware, the creator retains copyright; he is merely choosing not to charge for the use of his program.
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Yes. Under current US copyright law computer programs are considered "literary works"
The End User Licensing Agreement specifies how copyright law applies to a program.
Copyright infringement in general is copying, altering, or distributing protected material without the permission of the copyright holder. If you have a software license to put a program on one computer and you put it on two, you have infringed the copyright. More details can be found in the End User Licensing Agreement (EULA) of the program.
They have copyright to their content, not yours. Unless you steal/use their content, Anything you make/create is yours, however you might want to say which program was used in the end credits.Absolutely ,no copyright content on your videos ,if you use the program legally.
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